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Richard Binder On National Geographic!


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That's an awesome video. Great production value.

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Superb! Richard with his fingers inked-up, at work.

 

I think the "six people" remark means people who can handle the variety of repairs plus nib-crafting. A couple of years ago, at the NYC pen show, Richard diagnosed an odd "click" in a c/c P-61. The nib, he thought, had been bent to something like a 'V', seen end-on, rather than the proper upside-down 'U'. He extracted the nib without removing the hood, using a tool he borrowed from Ron Zorn. "This is NOT a Parker Nib Extraction Tool", he said, to which Ron added, "You mean a Nib Destruction Tool".

 

I think Richard means that only a handful of people can manage to wiggle and jiggle a twisted P-61 nib and get it back...as well as tune a Parker 51 ("The English 51 medium...ahhh", he said).

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It was a neat video.

I just get suspicious whenever someone says something like that. It sounds too elitist. Maybe he is correct, maybe not, but he opened the door to comments and questions by saying that. And who are the other 5?

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Richard does the hat trick. Nibmeister, Repairman and Fabricator. He can Make the part he needs. He also has some serious

reverse engineering skills.

 

Of course there are numerous par excellence examples of Each of those. All three (4?) rolled into one is far rarer.

 

That's why I leaned towards his students.

 

Bruce in Ocala, Fl

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"A fountain pen is really a controlled leak. The control come in [with] the use of the parts that keep it from leaking when it's not supposed to." -- Richard Binder

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Perhaps for those of us who don't know - and I am at the forefront of that small group - you could tell us who his students are? I mean the ones that offer services to the public and all.

 

 

Oops! :ninja: my request was to Mr FLGuy.

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Tim Girdler, Linda Kennedy and Jim Baer come to mind.

 

Jim worked with Richard for an extended period I believe.

 

Bruce in Ocala, Fl

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That was great! Thank you for posting :)

God put me on this earth to accomplish a certain number of things. Right now I am so far behind, I will never die.

-Bill Waterson

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There was a link to this video on the DCSS Facebook page a few days ago. Very nice video.

Ruth Morrisson aka inkstainedruth

"It's very nice, but frankly, when I signed that list for a P-51, what I had in mind was a fountain pen."

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  • 2 years later...

"A controlled leak" is wonderful!

I sent a pen to Mr. Zorn not too long ago, and it strikes me that it's a bit like the squishy little life forms they've extracted from The Burgess Shale: early designs that are wildly different from their more conventionalized descendants. The history of fountain pens can be seen in evolutionary terms: initial disparity of engineering and an interval of competition, in which a small number of successful forms survive.

This is why I think of Darwin when an eyedropper-filler leaks all over my fingers while writing with it.

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I learned how to transport a live hummingbird from the National Geographic, which came in handy about twenty years later. Life skills!

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"A controlled leak" is wonderful!

I sent a pen to Mr. Zorn not too long ago, and it strikes me that it's a bit like the squishy little life forms they've extracted from The Burgess Shale: early designs that are wildly different from their more conventionalized descendants. The history of fountain pens can be seen in evolutionary terms: initial disparity of engineering and an interval of competition, in which a small number of successful forms survive.

This is why I think of Darwin when an eyedropper-filler leaks all over my fingers while writing with it.

HUH?🤔🤔🤔
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I was asking myself why my old eyedropper pens leak, and the answer is something like: they were trying a lot of different ways to keep ink in a pen, and not all of them worked. The more efficient systems, subject to the selection of market forces and corporate management, resulted in better pens. Except, of course, that I still manage to end the day with ink all over my fingers.

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