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Grinding A Broken Parker Falcon Nib


Plusfoursmax

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So, I was in a meeting yesterday, and wanted to annotate my notes. I have my trusty Parker Falcon loaded with Skrip Red, and it was dry. I checked the reservoir, no probs, and upside down the nib worked. After the meeting I had a look through the loupe and saw that the tines were spread a bit, and the tip was dry. I gently pressed the tines down and together to bring them closer. Suddenly there was a ping and a rattle somewhere on my desk, and the pen is as you see it. It seems the welding on half the tip was fatigued and failed cleanly at the ball.

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Ah, well I could invest in a new tipping op, but retippers are a dying breed, and I don't think the pen is worth it. I decided to turn it into a usable stub Italic. Here goes.

1st action is to level the tines, I did this on 800 grit wet/dry. Skrip acts like a stained glass window!

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2nd was cutting the foot of the nib; normal Italic pens have a nib that widens out to present a slightly broad foot to the paper; A calligraphic Italic nib is much sharper. As this is a hack up, I need to do this gently. Started using orange mylar (coarse abrasive) on a mirror, gently cutting the bottom of the nib level, it looks a lot like a reed pen being worked on, for the same reason!

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Then cut the foot, blurry and dirty, but you get the idea.

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Tines misaligned, bent them in line and then on to polish.

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Tried to write and sharp and scratchy

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Used the yellow fine mylar abrasive sheet, first on the mirror, and then on a rubber pad on the mirror. This gives a little, and allows for a slight curve to form (incidentally this is exactly how the ends of optical fibres once glued into the plugs are given a slight radius and polish to allow a single point contact with the mating fibre, using the same mylar)

 

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Finished result, and a small sample. The pen is smooth in all directions, but I am fooling no-one that this was anything other than a hack-job. If I feel the need in later life, and am flush (and there is still someone prepared to do it) the remainder of the nib could be retipped with perhaps a bigger ball.

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This is a scratchy and smooth comparison (scatchy under the smooth)

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lastly, this is a pic of the yellow mylar, on the pad on the mirror, with the mixed inks of polishes past; rather fetching, I think!

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Hi Terim,

Thanks for the pointer. Ariel is an amazing craftsman and artist, and I am sure that if he had a section/nib, it would be beautifully looked after and presented. (His website is down currently, it looks like he sells through eBay a lot though.

However, I do not want to throw away the front of the pen just because the iridium broke off. I want to keep it whole, and do something with it; and hopefully not change it too much if I decide to retip it later on.

Thanks,

Max

 

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Actually I think you did an awesome job. Not knowing your pen repair experience, I'm inclined to believe that you are a solid crafts-person regardless of any of your own comments.

 

Just my 2 cents worth.

 

P.S. Very nice pictures and thanks for walking me/us through your process.

“Don't put off till tomorrow what you can do today, because if you do it today and like it, you can do again tomorrow!”

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