I have inked my 149 with MB Black ink today. What pen you used today ??
Montblanc.jpg
I have inked my 149 with MB Black ink today. What pen you used today ??
Montblanc.jpg
I inked my Bohème with Akkerman Delft's Blau
Regards, Chrissy | My Review Blog: inkyfountainpens
Cyril (June 28th, 2021)
I’m still going with my 149 Calligraphy, now inked with Herbin Rouille d’Ancre. I’ve only ever used Rouille d’Ancre with broad stubs and italics. I’ll let you all know how it goes.
I also have a 147 broad inked.
Cyril, what’s the nib on your 149? Medium?
BlkWhiteFilmPix (July 3rd, 2021), Cyril (June 28th, 2021)
My one and only one MB146 F nib.
2021-06-28 20.06.05.jpg
Cyril (June 28th, 2021)
Today? My 149 EF/F ca. '73 filled with MB midnight blue (from Austria). It achieves favorite status against many '50s-'80s 149s owned over the years, and I was only introduced to this one last year! It just goes to show, you never know what will turn up, or when. Of course, my nib preferences ebb and flow that lead to catches and releases, few regretted but most not. :-)
Cyril (June 28th, 2021)
My 146 OBB with Noodler's Dark Matter ink.
https://static1.squarespace.com/stat...rk-MatterW.jpg
Bob
Making the world a more peaceful place, one fine art print and one handwritten letter at a time.
“If ‘To hold a pen is to be at war’ as Voltaire said, Montblanc suggests you show up in full dress uniform, ready to go down like an officer and a gentleman among the Bic-wielding hordes.” - Chris Wright
Paper cuts through the noise – Richard Moross, MOO CEO
Indiana Jones used a notebook in the map room, not an app.
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My Mont blanc 146 with Diamine writers blood ink and Mini Mozart pen with Diamine Mozart Brown Ink !!!
I'm not using this one at the moment. I stopped and went to bed, and this is waiting for me this morning.
IMG_4698.jpg
But in my pen rack there's an old 149 filled with MB black and a 146 almost as old filled with MB blue/black iron gall.
Chrissy (May 2nd, 2022)
ahh. This is a good excuse to pull out my 234 1/2! Great Pen!
@Fred,...How often you clean your MB pen ???
This is the best therapy to get this pen cool. although my pens looks very Clean I need to get my pens ( Basically 3 ) to get into disassemble to give a general clean .
I guess they were never ever dis-assembled, cleaned and done any polishing or micro- scratch removal.
I don't have this nib/ piston removing tool. ( But I know this could be done easily by making a custom tool from a bigger paper clip) . I have all the stuffs . Plus polishing compounds etc. ~etc. I am still hesitating...
Cyril,
I disassemble Montblanc piston-fillers to flush, check parts and lubricate when I sell them, but I don't disassemble my personal Montblanc piston-fillers on a routine basis just to clean. I tend to use the same ink in each of them, so a flush with water is enough. If it has been years of constant use, then perhaps it is time for a thorough cleaning and lubrication. For example, I keep my early '70s 146 filled with MB blue/black iron gall ink, and after ten years, I had to disassemble the nib end to physically clear ink channels in the feed, but the piston mechanism was fine and I left it alone other than barely a smear of silicon grease for the piston.
Francis Goossens made my tools that fit celluloid and resin Montblanc piston-fillers. The paperclip method might work if the nib/feed housing isn't too tight, but without firm fitment it has the potential for damage to the notches. If you dig through Dale Beebe's Pentooling website, I believe you'll find similar tools that will be kinder to your pens. For polishing micro scratches from the resin pens, search for "Micro-gloss liquid abrasive" with the blue label (the green label is slightly more abrasive).
Since I am trying to sell my Montblanc 322, I am testing it currently in daily use:
I am always amazed at how well these veterans prove themselves in our modern times.
Last edited by christof; April 19th, 2022 at 01:42 PM.
It's a lovely pen, Christoph. It shouldn't last long in the classifieds.
Beautiful pen with an unusual colourful design out the Mont Blanc tradition... and lovely lovely drawing too.
I disassemble Montblanc piston-fillers to flush, check parts and lubricate when I sell them, but I don't disassemble my personal Montblanc piston-fillers on a routine basis just to clean. I tend to use the same ink in each of them, so a flush with water is enough. If it has been years of constant use, then perhaps it is time for a thorough cleaning and lubrication. For example, I keep my early '70s 146 filled with MB blue/black iron gall ink, and after ten years, I had to disassemble the nib end to physically clear ink channels in the feed, but the piston mechanism was fine and I left it alone other than barely a smear of silicon grease for the piston.
Francis Goossens made my tools that fit celluloid and resin Montblanc piston-fillers. The paperclip method might work if the nib/feed housing isn't too tight, but without firm fitment it has the potential for damage to the notches. If you dig through Dale Beebe's Pentooling website, I believe you'll find similar tools that will be kinder to your pens. For polishing micro scratches from the resin pens, search for "Micro-gloss liquid abrasive" with the blue label (the green label is slightly more abrasive).[/QUOTE]
Thank you Fred it was a very helpful site.. and there are many interesting stuffs there. So I leave my pen as it is until I get well equipped before I start hacking my pen.
Chrissy (May 5th, 2022)
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