Tom,
I will not discuss with you the issue of 'flawed' beading based on these pictures and based on your comparison with other crosses - and your conclusion that therefore the Rounder must be a fake.
However, I would like again to mention two things, since you brought this up again:
- there is no casted part on this cross, contrary to your statement "casting marks"??
- the lack of filing marks at the round corners - contrary to the ones one finds with Juncker - are surely no indication of a fake. There is no filing necessary when the corners are already round.
Now, the latest statement is that there are machining marks on the frame. Since you have no close connections to machines (I guess), this is something you have been told. Now, whoever told you this has a serious lack in understanding how machines are working.
What can bee seen on my cross are brush strokes, no machining 'grooves'. Unless somebody made theres stripes with a 'machining tool' that ends and starts like a brush and is not rotating. The only "machine" that might produce this (other then a brush) is a very fine sandpaper. Maybe tht's what was done. But to suggest that the frame is machined is not only wrong, it is completely misleading. The milling tool would need to have teeht smaller than a grain of sandpaper - not possible!
Do not fall into the trap of magnification. What looks under the microscope as huge grooves made by faker machines is in reality hardly visible with 10x magnification.
Dietrich
That's why one has to be very carefull with premature conclusions.
I will not discuss with you the issue of 'flawed' beading based on these pictures and based on your comparison with other crosses - and your conclusion that therefore the Rounder must be a fake.
However, I would like again to mention two things, since you brought this up again:
- there is no casted part on this cross, contrary to your statement "casting marks"??
- the lack of filing marks at the round corners - contrary to the ones one finds with Juncker - are surely no indication of a fake. There is no filing necessary when the corners are already round.
Now, the latest statement is that there are machining marks on the frame. Since you have no close connections to machines (I guess), this is something you have been told. Now, whoever told you this has a serious lack in understanding how machines are working.
What can bee seen on my cross are brush strokes, no machining 'grooves'. Unless somebody made theres stripes with a 'machining tool' that ends and starts like a brush and is not rotating. The only "machine" that might produce this (other then a brush) is a very fine sandpaper. Maybe tht's what was done. But to suggest that the frame is machined is not only wrong, it is completely misleading. The milling tool would need to have teeht smaller than a grain of sandpaper - not possible!
Do not fall into the trap of magnification. What looks under the microscope as huge grooves made by faker machines is in reality hardly visible with 10x magnification.
Dietrich
That's why one has to be very carefull with premature conclusions.
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