Sometimes when you get an older nib it is discolored.. what do you use to polish it up and make it look like new again?
Sometimes when you get an older nib it is discolored.. what do you use to polish it up and make it look like new again?
Meguiars metal polish. I always check the slit after to make sure no residue is hiding there.
Sunshine cloth. No residue to worry about, minimal material removal.
I'd second that; also is a marvellous mild polishing medium for the business end (tipping); I'd still floss the nib slit after polishing, though, since a Sailor once gave me grief after polishing (minimal ink flow) until I flossed a few sunshine cloth fibers from the nib slit right at the tip!
I'd start with a Selvyt PR cloth, and only resort to abrasive products like Meguiar's or a Sunshine cloth if that proves ineffective. Note that some of these products are intended to leave a protective film (e.g. "conditioner", wax, etc.) behind; that must be thoroughly stripped to ensure proper performance.
--Daniel
“Every discussion which is made from an egoistic standpoint is corrupted from the start and cannot yield an absolutely sure conclusion. The ego puts its own interest first and twists every argument, word, even fact to suit that interest.”
― Paul Brunton, The Notebooks of Paul Brunton
I took it from the OP's question that we were talking about the the difficult ones. Those are the ones I use metal polish on. For the rest, a little time with a clean cloth is quite enough. Now, "some of these products" isn't really specific enough. Do you mean Meguairs or don't you? I've been using the same container for about five years. I have many of the pens I've used it on in that time. Their performance is excellent.
If they're inky and dirty, but not actually scratched such that an abrasive product is needed to level the surface, a careful cleaning and work with a Selvyt PR is the mildest intervention. Failing that, I'd go with a dry impregnated polishing cloth to minimize the risk of getting paste into places it ought not be.
--Daniel
“Every discussion which is made from an egoistic standpoint is corrupted from the start and cannot yield an absolutely sure conclusion. The ego puts its own interest first and twists every argument, word, even fact to suit that interest.”
― Paul Brunton, The Notebooks of Paul Brunton
If it's just a discoloured older gold nib, then a quick dip into 'silver dip' works for me. Jewellery cleaner might work too. A whizz in an ultrasonic cleaner will also bring it up.
If it's an old vintage nib with marks as well as discolouration, then a wipe with a smooth cloth is worth a try before going on to a Sunshine cloth, then Meguiars polish
Bookmarks