DeaconKC
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,735
- Location
- Heber Springs, AR
Most converters are screw in that use a twist or pump mechanism to fill from a bottle.
Most converters are screw in that use a twist or pump mechanism to fill from a bottle.
Post some pics everyone
I've got a relatively inexpensive cartridge fountain pen (a Cross and cost around $30, IIRC). It's been dependable as can be - until recently. About a month ago it started acting as if it was out of ink (cartridge not empty) periodically during journal writing, etc. If I shook it a little, it would come back and write fine. But then the intermittent "dry" writing got more frequent. I tried cleaning by running water thru it (found that advice on a thread in The Lounge). It worked fine for a day or so then the frequent frustrations started all over again and have only gotten worse. At one point I got a big old blob of ink on the page like it had pooled or something behind the nib. But that's only happened once.
The pen all but doesn't write now, but I hate to discard it.
Any suggestions?
I've got a relatively inexpensive cartridge fountain pen (a Cross and cost around $30, IIRC). It's been dependable as can be - until recently. About a month ago it started acting as if it was out of ink (cartridge not empty) periodically during journal writing, etc. If I shook it a little, it would come back and write fine. But then the intermittent "dry" writing got more frequent. I tried cleaning by running water thru it (found that advice on a thread in The Lounge). It worked fine for a day or so then the frequent frustrations started all over again and have only gotten worse. At one point I got a big old blob of ink on the page like it had pooled or something behind the nib. But that's only happened once.
The pen all but doesn't write now, but I hate to discard it.
Any suggestions?
Is it a modern Cross or a vintage Cross, which refers their return to the market in the 1980s and the 1990s (prior to the 1980s, they were known for their Ball-Points and Mechanical Pencils)? Also, do you have a Converter?
-Quetzal
Sounds like you've got something blocking the nib...dried ink, paper fiber etc. if you have a converter, you can flush it a little better. You also might try letting it soak for a bit in the water to see if it loosens up. A fountain pen doesn't just stop working.
A cup full of lukewarm water and drop of teepol detergent was recommended to me as the ideal flushing or soaking solution by Arthur Twydle - known in his time over here as 'the pen wizard' . A converter is a sort of plug in refillable cartridge -ask for one in your pen shop- so you can use it to flush the solution in and out of the pen. You might be able to find and use a rubber bulb like the ones on old fashioned bike or car horns to suck water on and out of the pen. Finally you could repeatedly use your mouth to blow water through the pen after soaking it/re soaking it. Its most likely to be dried ink blocking the 'feed' - there are fine grooves on top of the bit that supports the nib under the nib and these can be blocked by dried ink.
Thanks for that tip, Robin. Unfortunately, Teepol doesn't appear to be commonly available in the States. Would you (or any other Loungers) know of an American equivalent? One of my pens is a wooden finish pen and I'd hate to damage that finish using too strong a product.
Thanks again for this tip and, in advance, for any add'l info on Teepol anyone can offer.
HG