Does Nyone know if anyone has posted line measurements for the lines produced by the various nibs Twsbi has? I know the Goulets have the "nook" but it's pretty hard to use without having measurements of the lines the nibs produce.
Does Nyone know if anyone has posted line measurements for the lines produced by the various nibs Twsbi has? I know the Goulets have the "nook" but it's pretty hard to use without having measurements of the lines the nibs produce.
It is kind of hard to do a definite measurement because it is going to change with the ink and paper, never mind flow adjustments.
Fountain Pen Sith Lord | Daakusaido | Everything in one spot
I was able to find this:
http://www.nibs.com/TippingSizespage.htm
and this:
http://www.richardspens.com/pdf/strokewidths.pdf
I dont have a retailer that has TWSBI widths nor does TWSBI itself provide the information. I dont understand why, it seems like retailers could benefit greatly. I would imagine pens are returned because the nibs are too wide or too narrow.
Ok, I am assuming TWSBI uses Bock nibs for the Vac 700? I read on a different forum that Montegrapa uses Bock nibs. So looking the nib.com nib spec sheet that should be the same measurements for the TWSBI's?
I got these measurements from Speedy himself:
EF under 0.3mm
F approx. 0.3mm
M approx. 0.5mm
B approx. 0.7mm
Again, it is also going to be dependant on paper and ink.
Fountain Pen Sith Lord | Daakusaido | Everything in one spot
I am just curious, ok? But what is the deal with people being so intent on wanting to know what the line measurements are for specific pens? Not casting doubt with anyone for what they want to accomplish, Just curious though.
As for myself: I'm an attorney constantly filling filling out forms and taking notes. Having a nib too thick makes my o's and e's seem like they are one in the same. I have found a .05 mm line is perfect for my printing and style of writing. I have also found extra fine and fine nibs a bit scratchy so I want to get as big of a nib I can and yet get me to .05.
So maybe it's just me but the .02 mm differences in lines makes a huge difference. I understand that pressure, ink, flow all matter but I don't tinker with the pen so all I do is rely on what's out of the box.
I find the same thing happens with my handwritting ast PeppWaves03. Unfortuently I seem to like broad nibs the best! I don't do much critical hand writting so it's pretty much just affecting me when I have to read something I wrote a month ago that didn't stick in my memory One thing I did notice is that when I use Stub nibs, even some crisp italics, I can still read my writting and the "e" and "o" are still what they should be. Maybe it is just how I hold the pen with those nibs but I was suprised!
I used to think EF nibs were where it was at. Boy, was I wrong. I gifted my Lamy Vista with 1.1mm nib to my daughter and she is relearning to write more "openly" as I had to.
Last edited by KrazyIvan; May 11th, 2012 at 08:44 AM.
Fountain Pen Sith Lord | Daakusaido | Everything in one spot
Has anyone compared the lamy 1.1 with the twsbi 1.1?
You mean side-by side?
TWSBI 1.1mm stub vs. Lamy 1.1mm stub by IvanRomero, on Flickr
Fountain Pen Sith Lord | Daakusaido | Everything in one spot
KrazyIvan, any preference between the two for you?
Lamy appears to be thinner maybe a Medium to the other ... Thanks
I don't have a preference and use them both equally. Well, at least I did. I gifted the vista but I have an Al Star with the same nib. The TWSBI is flexy while the Lamy is a nail. That comparison is not totally fair since they have different inks loaded in them.
Fountain Pen Sith Lord | Daakusaido | Everything in one spot
If you're relying on a pens performance out of the box, you're gonna have a rough time. Rarely have I ever received a pen with a nib that was the exact size I wanted and as smooth as I wanted and with the right amount of flow.
A much easier way, in my opinion, is to buy the pen you want with a nib size larger than you use. Then, send it to a nib meister with your preferences for width, flow, and what paper and ink you use most often. When you realize that someone like Mike Masuyama can change any pen into anything you want, it'll change the way you look at every pen for the rest of your life.
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