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Anyone Tried Repairing A Bakelite Pen?


sidthecat

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I bought a YUGE Dunn pen with a wonderfully flexy nib, but the barrel has a piece broken off it (the piece is included). I asked the seller if it wasn't bchr, but he insisted that it was Bakelite and could be repaired. So I researched Bakelite repairs, and it appears that the antique radio and telephone fanciers have a variety of methods to keep their prizes in one piece.

I'm curious to see if anyone has tried any of those methods with pens. If it's fixable, I might try to keep the bits together because that magnificent nib may be too big for any of my ringtop pens - even my Dorics.

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Do check that it is indeed Bakelite, I use Simichrome polish, a little dab turns yellow when rubbed in, I've read that Formula 409 works the same way. David Nishimura (Vintagepens.com) says that only the early Dunn pens were Bakelite. His site has interesting information about the company.

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Do check that it is indeed Bakelite, I use Simichrome polish, a little dab turns yellow when rubbed in, I've read that Formula 409 works the same way. David Nishimura (Vintagepens.com) says that only the early Dunn pens were Bakelite. His site has interesting information about the company.

 

... and if it smells like campher it's celluloid.

 

Best

Jens

.....................................................................................................

https://www.flickr.com/photos/136145166@N02/albums

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The Dunn Tattler models with the cherry red see through barrels are Bakelite, like the Parker pens with the cherry red transparent barrels.

 

The black barrels should be hard rubber.

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It’s got a red translucent barrel, so I’m guessing Bakelite. That said, the broken piece is at the end, where the red plunger lives.

Has anyone tried to repair one of these things?

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