Jump to content

All Activity

This stream auto-updates

  1. Past hour
  2. clint1

    Help identifying nib size

    Sure, between the solid lines it's around 8 mm, and 4 mm between the solid and the dashed line.
  3. Welcome to FPN! With the pictures on penexchange.de and your comment "Looks a little more blue when it goes on the page but dries to something more grey, with a hint of blue", I have to wonder if you'd be open to an iron gall ink. Because it kinda sounds and looks like an IG anyhow.
  4. Thank you, Mercian! I agree that’s it’s similar to Pelikan jade (which I also happen to love). It’s actually not an uncommon color but because I am a little silly when it comes to inks, I ended up getting a bottle of it anyway! Incidentally, I just got a 10ml bottle of the new J herbin Metropolitan Green ink which is very similar In color—highly recommend—as well.
  5. Bo Bo Olson

    paper from Germany

    It is affordable for 3 reams of paper....... Will have to ask the oracle; ink or paper.....and the more I think about it, this might well be the much better deal. ...I didn't need those two inks anyway.....the start of my next world record dither campaign.
  6. Thank you for posting! I’ve been eagerly awaiting swatches of these colors. Agreed, the Carnelian is stunning!
  7. Mercian

    Help identifying nib size

    It would help even more if you told us what the distance is between those guidelines on that paper. If the line-separation is 5mm, your nib would be one width, but if the line-separation is 10mm it’d be another width. So, how many mm is it from one of the solid lines to one of the dashed lines? Or how many mm between each pair of solid lines? Slàinte, M.
  8. clint1

    Help identifying nib size

    Ah ok, didn't realize that. Attaching one now.
  9. Today
  10. Sheptonian

    Parker Converter

    The slimline converter was introduced around the time of the uber-thin Parker 180 (c.1975) IIRC. I suspect that the majority if not all of the Parker models that followed were designed around the slimline converter and its similarly skinny descendants. The Parker 35, Parker 50, Parker 85, Vector, Parker 88/Rialto, Arrow/Parker 95 all will not take the broader converters, for instance (I have just checked). The barrel of the c. 1983 Parker Premier is broad enough to accommodate the wider converter but I wouldn't like to try my luck and tighten everything up! The good news of course is that the narrower converters should be backwards-compatible thanks to Parker's forward-thinking many years ago.
  11. mixink

    Guide To Disassemble Vintage Kaweco V12

    I managed to clean my pen and get the piston to operate again thanks to these instructions. What a great source FPN is.
  12. marlinspike

    100th Anniversary editions

    Oh, it will definitely have the proper engraving, every special edition has had this as an option and you've always gotten the proper engraving (even buying a Petit Prince that was out of production for 3 years at the time I bought it had the benefit of the correct nib engraving on the swap, though it took longer than normal to get that), but I don't believe you would get your original nib back, just that the replacement nib will look the same visually.
  13. Ron Z

    Parker 45 or 51

    Same section, which is where most of the problems pop up. But they can be REALLY ugly. I mean really ugly. I've seen them.
  14. A green Sunderland Mk1 with an Ohto Ceramic C-310 1.0 blue-black refill.
  15. Mercian

    Parker 45 or 51

    Do you know anyone/anywhere that has one of those for sale? In my experience, they’re about as easy to find as a heartfelt, genuine apology from a politician 😉
  16. Not an uncommon style for 40s or so era celluloid. Here's a Moore in an interesting model, and they had the striated celluloid in silver/grey, brown, and a brown/copper mix.
  17. fpupulin

    100th Anniversary editions

    Thank you.
  18. Lam1

    100th Anniversary editions

    I have an order for the 149 with BB and a Classique with OM. Even though I didn't believe the rumors, I specifically asked the German retailer if it was true that any nib other than M would not have 100th Anniversary engraving: the retailer assured me this is not true, that then entire nib range is available and said that MB would never go through the trouble of creating a special pen only to spoil it afterwards with a nib that doesn't belong to it (which, makes a lot of sense).
  19. XYZZY

    Pilot Con-70: Ink in Cap

    I suppose if there is an air leak your CON-70 could be the problem. But I would simply make sure it's all the way inserted and then move on to other possibilities. I like @HowardC's suggestions. How well do you wipe down the drenched feed after you fill the pen? I always use a cloth and absorb as much as can easily be absorbed. Another idea: after unscrewing the cap do you quickly yank it off the pen? That can cause a vacuum and pull ink out, although I can't imagine that causing ink drops in the cap. Also, don't overestimate the frustration with the CON-70. It's human nature that we complain more than praise, and the internet and search engines exacerbate that. If a converter works really really well I would expect to hear very little about it. The CON-70 also has usability issues that are not at all apparent. Is it a shortcoming in the product if it requires training to use it? Actually for a converter, when the alternatives/competition require no training, I think the answer is "yes". A shortcoming of the design, as opposed to a flaw in the execution.
  20. Sheptonian

    Parker 45 or 51

    Provided that you are fairly sure of not having it filched, why wouldn't you?
  21. marlinspike

    100th Anniversary editions

    The benefit of a clear is to avoid an edge that will catch wear. I will be very surprised if anybody who has a nib swap gets their original nib back. Maybe what they meant is the nib you get back will have the same engraving.
  22. XYZZY

    Basic Noob question about Pilot converters

    Yes, the CON-70 is certainly harder to fill when held at an angle. I think that is not understood by some people, which can lead to frustration. And of course the natural thing to do when trying to fill from a nearly empty bottle is to hold it at an angle. Pilot somewhat addresses this by having ink fill from the front of the feed instead of at the section, but that only goes so far. And most people seem unaware of that design feature, too; or else they just don't appreciate it. I try to sneak it into a conversation when I can, but probably just come off as obsessed nerd. 😛
  23. Five years? You waited five years? An epic romance.
  24. kazoolaw

    Help identifying nib size

    Without a writing sample it’s nearly impossible to tell.
  25. XYZZY

    Basic Noob question about Pilot converters

    Any idea where I can find that patent? The illustration says "PAT. NO. 410661.424210." Maybe that's two patents and the "." is a separator? Either way, I'm not having any luck. I could search by those numbers and find something that looked like a patent, but they had nothing to do with pens.
  26. yazeh

    Diamine Vivaldi

    This colour would have been more suitable for a late romantic composer He's a phoenix this one You never know
  27. DimitriDiak

    100th Anniversary editions

    Thanks for the information but I plan to be gentle with my lacquered pen. As you say there does not appear to be a clear-coat but I don’t know why it would be necessary. Even though I intend to use it I won’t be going swimming with it (not like Ripley in the Netflix series 😅). Cheers.
  1. Load more activity






×
×
  • Create New...