-
March 27th, 2020, 09:03 PM
#1
Senior Member
- Rep Power
- 13
An "Accurate" pen review
As some may recall, a while ago I acquired a vintage fountain pen that had no branding on it except for the name "Accurate" engraved on the clip. The principal reason for this purchase was the desire to own at least one old ebonite pen, especially with a woodgrain effect to it. Unfortunately, as I subsequently discovered, this pen is in fact made of some other material - most likely a plastic of some kind. Nevertheless, it is a pleasant pen to use, or is now (more on this later).
Here is the pen (apologies for photos, everyone knows I am not good with a camera).
Some dimensions:
Pen capped = 132 mm
Body = 104 mm
Body + nib = 129 mm
Approx max girth of body = 13 mm
Narrowest part of section is approx. 10 mm
Section length = 15 mm
Originally the pen would most likely have been fitted with a size 8 warranted gold nib. In this case the seller has replaced this with a large vintage Parker Duofold nib in an extra fine width. So it is fitting to give a quick comparison with a Parker Duofold Sr, thus:
As can be seen, both pens are very similar in sizes. The Accurate pen is perhaps a 1 mm longer when capped, and seems slightly thicker overall. The length difference is more noticeable when uncapped, but still not too significant.
The Accurate pen posts firmly, but ends up being 170 mm long! The balance remains largely unaffected.
As can be seen, it is a lever filler. Not really anything I can add that most people already don't know about such systems. It works, and takes a reasonable fill of ink.
A word about the nib. I would have preferred the original nib to maintain some degree of authenticity. The fitted Duofold nib was almost unusable when it arrived. At first I wasn't sure what to do with it, but I kept it aside and did some reading. With no little trepidation I endeavoured to align the tines and give the tipping the lightest of smoothing. Now it writes very well and will remain in my small collection.
Overall, the Accurate pen is a nice larger size that would most likely fit the hand of the majority of writers. It is light in weight too.
I remain committed to finding a vintage ebonite woodgrain pen, though expect it to be a long, long wait.
-
The Following 10 Users Say Thank You to Empty_of_Clouds For This Useful Post:
amk (September 21st, 2020), azkid (March 28th, 2020), Bisquitlips (November 17th, 2020), carlos.q (March 28th, 2020), catbert (March 28th, 2020), digitalsedition (September 20th, 2020), Lady Onogaro (March 28th, 2020), Pterodactylus (September 21st, 2020), Scrawler (October 13th, 2020), SlowMovingTarget (September 21st, 2020)
Tags for this Thread
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
Bookmarks