Great close-ups - what microscope are you using please?
It's a bit of a Frankenstein setup TBH.
Originally I had SM-8TW2-144S. This is a trinocular, not a simul-focal head. The articulating arm is great. I don't use the LED ring because I found that it gets in the way of some tools like hot air irons. I do use the 0.5x Barlow permanently. Instead of the ring I use a pair of gooseneck Lloytron 3W L1507SV narrow (~45 degree) spots clipped onto the microscope's head that are still available on ebay. The problem with desk based goosenecks is that you'd have to repeatedly adjust them as you adjust the microscope head's position. Having them clipped to the head itself saves you this inconvenience.
A couple of years ago, I swapped the trinocular microscope head for a simul-focal one (SM745TP): simul-focal is pretty much essential if you do video. The trinocular and simul-focal heads look almost identical from the outside, and all the ports are the same.
Originally for the camera I used a 0.5x reducer with C mount and a third party HDMI 1080p camera. Although the latency isn't bad, it's still useless trying to solder using a screen compared to having a 3D view that a fully optical stereoscopic microscope affords.
I also modified a 4k60p Yi 4k Plus action camera to take a C mount, but the results weren't great. As a result I have been using a Micro four-thirds camera (MFT) on the mount for the past year or so, still with the 0.5x reducer, but with a C mount to MFT adapter, and using the in camera cropping at native sensor resolution. The camera I've been using is either a Panasonic G7 or GX9 in 1080p. Over the past few days, I've modified the camera port to directly take an uncropped MFT sensor without the 0.5x reducer. Although it's a bit better, I'm not totally happy with the results. At present there still seems to be little point in going to 4k as initial indications suggest that the results don't seem to improve compared to 1080p, but I probably need to play with it a bit more. My ultimate ambition is to be able to take decent 4k60p video on the camera head: I do already have a couple of MFT cameras with that capability.
This brings me to whether or not these microscopes are parfocal or not, i.e., do they maintain a reasonable focus throughout the zoom range? The answer is yes, but you do need to spend time setting them up properly in a systematic and iterative way. The reason I mention this is that I believe this is at least part of the reason that I'm having difficulty with the camera port giving the same kind of image quality that I see through the eye pieces particularly over the complete zoom range. I can get close, but it's still a little disappointing at the moment, I need to spend more time at it. For example, as well as the aforementioned parfocal aspect, focus still isn't maintained across the frame.
Finally, with the 0.5x Barlow there is about 8" of working distance which is good, but you need to make sure you can adjust your chair height for this comfortably. I have to set my chair at its highest setting for this to be comfortable. Not a big deal, assuming you have a height adjustable chair of course!