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Posted
On 10/30/2025 at 2:56 AM, Cyclops said:

Someday I'll be able to get some TR, Rhodia, Clairefontaine, or other higher-end fountain pen-specific paper.  Til then I have HP Office20, HP Copy and Print 20, and Hammermill Premium Inkjet & Laser 24lb.  I spent a while writing on a sheet of each with my current line of inked pens, then went back and wrote a list for each folder (I color-copy a sheet of narrow-lined notebook paper onto these printer papers and keep them in separate folders) of which inks work best with what paper.  Surprisingly, the HP Office20 has the longest list of my inks that work well with it.  And my daily writing inks (Noodler's X-Feather Black and Platinum Carbon Black) are on that list.

I was pleasantly surprised at how many inks worked so well with the HP Office20. 

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Posted

I got my Penn State pen back today (Tuesday, 4Nov).  The guy bought a replacement nib in case he messed up the original.  I finished cleaning out the original nib, as it still had a bit of ink in it from his testing, I suppose.

Anyway, while it's drying, I installed the replacement and inked it with Platinum Carbon Black, amd wrote on a sheet of the HP Office20.  The EF nib did a decent job, though it could stand to be a bit finer.  The other ink I had in it before I sent it off was Diamine Celadon Cat, and it feathered a lot and really soaked into the papers I used it on.  So I'll use the current inked nib til tomorrow, when the worked-on nib should be dried out.

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  • 4 weeks later...
Posted

Well, I am more than just a little disappointed in that Jinhao 10 retractable pen.  After sitting unused for just a couple of hours, it was an extremely hard starter.  Then I put a little silicone grease around the flap.  No good; it still dries iut and is an extreme hard starter.  Apparently these pens are a crapshoot as far as getting a good one is concerned.  Some folks have nothing but good things to say about theirs; others have nothing but bad.  I reckon that if I want a quality retractable fountain pen, I'll have to save my pennies and get a Pilot, possibly a Platinum.

Majohn retractables are a bit more than the Jinhao, and much less than Pilots and Platinums, but I dont know if I want to chance that.  I actually would like to get the other Jinhao that I was wanting.  If that one works, I'd use it instead.  But at least the Pilot would have the correct size EF nib in it.

Oh, well.  Things could always be worse, I suppose. 

Posted

On a more positive note, I seem to have finally fixed the problem of my olive wood Conklin All-American from drying out after sitting for even just 10 minutes.  I tried lots of stuff; Infinity inks from Private Reserve; still dried out, just took a few minutes longer.  Someone suggested wrapping the nib in saran wrap before capping; it drew most of the ink out of the converter.  I put wood sealer on the barrel and cap, 2 or 3 coats; the nib mocked me by continuing to dry out.  So I got all sorts of fed up, called it a piece of junk and the worst pen purchase I ever made (in the short time I've been using fountain pens), wrapped it up, wrote "Do Not Use Anymore; Complete Waste of Time and Money" on the paper sack, put it away, and didn't touch it (barely thought about it) for several months.  Then one day when my wife asked if there was anything I wanted or needed from the store, I asked her to get me a jar/bottle of rubber cement.

I got the pen back out and q-tipped some rubber cement all around the inside of the cap.  Set it aside for about half an hour, then applied another coat.  Inked the pen with Noodler's X-Feather Black.  Got it to write properly then set it aside for a while.  It wrote again after about 10-15 minutes.  Set it aside again for half an hour.  It wrote again.  The big test would come after it sat all night.  Guess what?  It wrote first time I tried it.  Now I'd like to get an o-ring to put where the barrel and grip section meet, just as an added protection against drying out.  But so far, it's been working.  And I'm glad; it cost too much to not be able to use.

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Posted
On 11/30/2025 at 7:15 PM, Cyclops said:

Well, I am more than just a little disappointed in that Jinhao 10 retractable pen.  After sitting unused for just a couple of hours, it was an extremely hard starter.  Then I put a little silicone grease around the flap.  No good; it still dries iut and is an extreme hard starter.  Apparently these pens are a crapshoot as far as getting a good one is concerned.  Some folks have nothing but good things to say about theirs; others have nothing but bad.  I reckon that if I want a quality retractable fountain pen, I'll have to save my pennies and get a Pilot, possibly a Platinum.

Majohn retractables are a bit more than the Jinhao, and much less than Pilots and Platinums, but I dont know if I want to chance that.  I actually would like to get the other Jinhao that I was wanting.  If that one works, I'd use it instead.  But at least the Pilot would have the correct size EF nib in it.

Oh, well.  Things could always be worse, I suppose. 

I have 3 retractable pens: 2 Moon Man and a Jinhao 10.  Guess which doesn't like to start.

The Jinhao is notorious for that.  I hear you need to load a very wet ink, like Iroshizuku.  Good luck with it.

  • 5 months later...
Posted

NID: Iroshizuku Syo-ro (I've had the Cerulean Blue Eco for a few years now)

I had a sample vial of it I got several years ago as a random 8-pack, but seldom used it. Then I inked that Eco and ran out. So now I won't run out anytime soon. I hope.

Hopefully soon I can get another Pilot Metropolitan to add to my small collection (I'll have three at that point) and a bottle of Platinum Chou Kuro with my birthday money.  (Yes, sometimes I'm still a kid and get some of that green stuff for b-days.)

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