Are you wanting to develop your lining abilities? With The Tattoo Journal Workbook Series you can practice your fundamentals anytime and anyplace. Setting up is as easy as opening the workbook. The Tattoo Journal V1 Basic Lining Exercises amzn.to/3P1pawO The Tattoo Journal V2 Advanced Lining Exercises amzn.to/47VYmGN Should you have any questions please feel free to drop a comment and I will do my best to assist you in the best possible direction.
Definitely looks like a cool machine, wrapping it does look like a pain. Would putting a silicone washer as such on the backing to protect the electricals inside?
Thank you for your feedback and support! I appreciate you. I agree, this machine looks awesome! I love it. I would not recommend putting a silicone washer around the electrical area because I can see that interfering with the rotations. Wrapping is bit tricky but I feel it is also pretty easy to cold sterilize and wipe down.
Thank you for your time and support! I appreciate you. I agree! It is a fantastic machine. I did various tattoos with it and they all went smoothly. I like to combine this machine with the Inkclaw power grips. It is a solid combination.
@@DanielYuck thanks to you for posting m8 i find your channel plenty educative, you gave me a idea of a small size tattoo with the video of that angel you did a couple of weeks back on time (i didnt lose the leg, so thanks for that) haahah
Thank you for the time, feedback and support! The lowest voltage setting that I have ran on this machine was 4 volts even if I am remembering correctly. On a side note If the power supply ranges from 0 volts to say for example 15 volts the machine will operate on what voltage we select. We may need a jumpstart tho in the lower voltage range which the Inkclaw grip does offer.
Great question! I absolutely love this machine! I was actually using it yesterday to put in some more practice. I feel it depends on what you are wanting from your setup and machine. This machine is fantastic and for multiple reasons! We can adjust the stroke, we can use most grips available on the market. Which means we can use cartridges or barred needles. I don't think it is a matter of better machines as this machine is a good quality and all around great machine. I feel it is a matter of what we want from our setups.
@@DanielYuck hey i appreciate your response!!! Ive been debating on finding a good machine for a reasonable price and most of the ones were Pen style machines. So are there any REAL difference/benefits using this style machine over a Pen other than the shape? For example are Pen machines more balanced, quiet, low vibration, or battery life? Or are they about the same, and just as u said is all about preference? Because even with the Pens there are huge selections in quality that i was torn by. Like is spending $1,300 on a Critical Torque gonna be THAT much of a huge difference from a $300 DragonHawk Fold Pro to justify buying it???
Thank you for your feedback and continued support Michael! I put the last rubber band I had on it but it didn't hold up and busted off haha. It was a bad band and I have to get some more. Although I will say that the machine ran smooth without the band.
I assume that's because of the high 200g torque. The reason you are working on other machines at 8/9 V is becuase those machines do lose torque at lower voltage. If a machine hits strong... then you don't have to run it so fast. Just because an another machine runs at 8V, doesn't mean you will do your lines in one pass. You most likely have to move your hand slow. On this machine.... who knows: You probably would move your hand with 6 V at same speed as you would do on another machine at 8 V. Long story short: You should not be generelizing all machines. For example: Cheyenne Sol Nova. That machine can run with 30 Hz. It means, when you set it to 8V, it runs only with 70-80 Hz, while other machines run at 100-110 Hrz at 8V. Every machine is different. However. There is a reason why machines such a Bishop Packer, FK Flux or Sol Nova Unlimited are so good (and expensive). They run with a 9Watt motor whereas other machines mostly have just 6Watt.
Are you wanting to develop your lining abilities?
With The Tattoo Journal Workbook Series you can practice your fundamentals anytime and anyplace. Setting up is as easy as opening the workbook.
The Tattoo Journal V1 Basic Lining Exercises
amzn.to/3P1pawO
The Tattoo Journal V2 Advanced Lining Exercises
amzn.to/47VYmGN
Should you have any questions please feel free to drop a comment and I will do my best to assist you in the best possible direction.
Awesome video! Very informative! Loved the details, loved the explanations and most of all I loved the visual!
Hasta que voltaje se puede usar la maquina? O solamente en los rangos de 5 a 6 volts??? Saludos
Que voltaje usaste con las lineas gruesas?
Definitely looks like a cool machine, wrapping it does look like a pain. Would putting a silicone washer as such on the backing to protect the electricals inside?
Thank you for your feedback and support! I appreciate you.
I agree, this machine looks awesome! I love it. I would not recommend putting a silicone washer around the electrical area because I can see that interfering with the rotations. Wrapping is bit tricky but I feel it is also pretty easy to cold sterilize and wipe down.
This looks sick bro I got the dragonhawk v2s can you test that one and let me know how good it is so far I love it I really don’t like pen styles
that is impressive chinese tech...i started looking at them a couple of months ago thanks to one of your videos, really solid machine
Thank you for your time and support! I appreciate you.
I agree! It is a fantastic machine. I did various tattoos with it and they all went smoothly. I like to combine this machine with the Inkclaw power grips. It is a solid combination.
@@DanielYuck thanks to you for posting m8 i find your channel plenty educative, you gave me a idea of a small size tattoo with the video of that angel you did a couple of weeks back on time (i didnt lose the leg, so thanks for that) haahah
That machine looks great and adjustments are nice.and you sre just great ink claw looks great😊
Thanks Daniel, looks like a great machine.
You're welcome! Thank you for the time and support!
I appreciate you.
Hello whats the voltage and stroke when were you doin the stipple shading of rose flower on real skin?
this thing looks great and is very versatile. Thanx for sharing this video
Thank you for the feedback and support!
I appreciate you Viktor!
Great video, whats the lowest volts you can run this machine with?
Thank you for the time, feedback and support!
The lowest voltage setting that I have ran on this machine was 4 volts even if I am remembering correctly.
On a side note If the power supply ranges from 0 volts to say for example 15 volts the machine will operate on what voltage we select. We may need a jumpstart tho in the lower voltage range which the Inkclaw grip does offer.
4 months later, would u still recommend this machine or would u say there are better machines around the same class / caliber?
Great question! I absolutely love this machine!
I was actually using it yesterday to put in some more practice.
I feel it depends on what you are wanting from your setup and machine. This machine is fantastic and for multiple reasons! We can adjust the stroke, we can use most grips available on the market. Which means we can use cartridges or barred needles.
I don't think it is a matter of better machines as this machine is a good quality and all around great machine. I feel it is a matter of what we want from our setups.
@@DanielYuck hey i appreciate your response!!! Ive been debating on finding a good machine for a reasonable price and most of the ones were Pen style machines. So are there any REAL difference/benefits using this style machine over a Pen other than the shape? For example are Pen machines more balanced, quiet, low vibration, or battery life? Or are they about the same, and just as u said is all about preference?
Because even with the Pens there are huge selections in quality that i was torn by. Like is spending $1,300 on a Critical Torque gonna be THAT much of a huge difference from a $300 DragonHawk Fold Pro to justify buying it???
How is the inkclaw grip autoclave able?
How you adjust the needle depth?
Wow this is a interesting machine id want to get just for the look of it
It is a great looking machine ! haha I love the looks of it too.
Both versions are very nice! All around great & solid machine.
Needs a rubber band on it thats what the little post are on each side
Thank you for your feedback and continued support Michael!
I put the last rubber band I had on it but it didn't hold up and busted off haha. It was a bad band and I have to get some more. Although I will say that the machine ran smooth without the band.
5-6 volt recommended is nuts and you move very slow
I assume that's because of the high 200g torque. The reason you are working on other machines at 8/9 V is becuase those machines do lose torque at lower voltage. If a machine hits strong... then you don't have to run it so fast. Just because an another machine runs at 8V, doesn't mean you will do your lines in one pass. You most likely have to move your hand slow. On this machine.... who knows: You probably would move your hand with 6 V at same speed as you would do on another machine at 8 V. Long story short: You should not be generelizing all machines. For example: Cheyenne Sol Nova. That machine can run with 30 Hz. It means, when you set it to 8V, it runs only with 70-80 Hz, while other machines run at 100-110 Hrz at 8V. Every machine is different. However. There is a reason why machines such a Bishop Packer, FK Flux or Sol Nova Unlimited are so good (and expensive). They run with a 9Watt motor whereas other machines mostly have just 6Watt.
I think I can stick and poke 11rs faster than that thing