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Before yesterdayJust Another Pen Blog

Dux 240 Fountain Pen

After enjoying the Dollar pen (still to be reviewed) so much I was curious about other Pakistani pens. After seeing it mentioned in the comments of a video I tracked down a Dux 240 on ebay for the princely sum of ยฃ2.99. It arrived without any packaging apart from a cellophane sleeve and I got it washed out, dried and inked up. And oh dear, it doesnโ€™t do well. I usually wait ages to review a pen, putting it through its paces with may reloads. But this one Iโ€™m getting done well early on the first inkingโ€ฆ

It looks smart at work.

The pen is an aerometric style filler. The sack is in a metal tube which can be wiggled off. Compressing the sack with the pressure bar many times did not get much ink in. I can see the breather tube in the sack so itโ€™s not a simple bladder filler but the system does not work well. There is an ink window before the section but itโ€™s not very clear and obscured by the threading for the barrel to attach to the section (the window is not visible when the barrel is attached).

A typical sack filler.

The pen body and section are burgundy plastic with a silver metal ring at the end which balances nicely with the metal cap and the metal ring at the back of the section. The cap is a friction fit which starts to grip the section about a centimetre before fully shut. This means it is pretty secure. The cap has the Dux logo painted on with a dotted line around the base and a plain end finial. The metal clip has the Dux logo on it and instead of bending actually pivots at the end connected to the cap.

The nib is a a triangular semi-hooded design which is bent at an angle lengthwise to add rigidity to the thin metal. The Dux logo is badly stamped across it.

The grip is most curious. There is an inlaid metal teardrop on the top, which is nice. But what is not are the two facets on the top of the section. They are so โ€˜highโ€™ on the section they cannot act like Safari-esque finger guides. What they feel like is that there is bodywork missing on top and my thumb and first finger have less surface area to hold on to. Itโ€™s usable, but not comfortable.

So I loaded it up with Cult Pens Deep, Dark Red from Diamine. And oh dear, the nib was not a happy component. Not scratchy, more scrapey. It got jammed up with paper fibres. Looking with my loupe showed tines aligned but with rough surfaces on the tipping. So I got out my multi-grit emery board and got to work on it. As it was so bad it didnโ€™t take much effort to improve a lot but after two polishing sessions it still has a lot of feedback when laying down its medium width line.

Note the ink stains at the back of the nib

I also noticed a lot of red ink on my fingers. It seems the ink accumulates at the edge of the nib where it protrudes from the section and even though I donโ€™t touch the nib itself letting my fingers near the end of the grip gets them stained.

Another issue more specific to this pen was a line of faint โ€˜dotsโ€™ along the barrel. It looks like the plastic had been dragged over something harder, marring the surface.

Amusingly Iโ€™ve seen Hero 240โ€™s online, the same pen with Hero branding. Maybe one company makes the pen for the other? Maybe one company has cloned the other? Who knows?

Overall I canโ€™t recommend it when you can buy a Hero 616 at half the price without the problems.

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weirdwalthamstow

Namisu Nova Ebonite

Itโ€™s funny to review the Namisu Nova Ebonite after the Ixion. I missed the original metal Nova kickstarter as I didnโ€™t find the design quite as original as the Nexus. But they released the ebonite version which tempted me, but by the time I chose to make the purchase they had sold out! To make it worse when the first reviews of the model came out I experienced major FOMO. Fortunately they made a second run so I jumped on in buying the ยฃ100 pen with an extra ยฃ40 to upgrade to a titanium Bock nib from the base steel.

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In use at work with Iroshizuku Tsutsuji ink. The matching cap and barrel finials are Titanium.

It arrived in a Namisu branded box. I bought a Namisu leather sleeve to go with it which is very nice with the brand name on it. However it also came with a nice felt slip which Iโ€™ve been using for my other Namisu pens.

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Nova with Namisu leather pen sleeve

What strikes you first is the smell of burning tires. Ebonite is heat hardened rubber and boy, did it smell like it. But the smell wears off after a few weeks.

The pen feels great in the hand, with the ebonite section and barrel not cold to the touch and giving the pen a retro-futuristic feel. The titanium finials look like jet engine intakes in my imagination. The cap comes off in one turn and can post, but Iโ€™d worry about marking the barrel surface. It has no clip, so clearly like the Nexus will roll off your desk every bastard chance it has; another advantage of the leather slip.

The pen is a cartridge converter and came with a Shmidt converter. Itโ€™s in reloading the pen a small error becomes apparent; the metal threading section in the back of the section has sometimes unscrewed from the section, not the barrel. Making sure it was attached tightly seems to have rectified this. With the metal barrel finial secured with a screw this is not suitable for eye dropper filling.

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The ink stained Bock nib.

The nib is lots of fun. Itโ€™s quite bouncy and flexes a bit on any writing with no pressure. In fairness it does skip a little when writing fast and not watching the force Iโ€™m using. As you can see in the photo the matte finish has a habit of staining with ink, but it washes clean easily.

Overall Iโ€™m very happy with the ebonite Nova. It has a classic style, interesting materials and writes differently to anything else in my collection but is still practical enough for the office.

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weirdwalthamstow

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Zebra-G calligraphy nib

So calligraphy isnโ€™t something Iโ€™m interested in. I had a cheap calligraphy pen a while back and didnโ€™t care for it. But I do like flex nib pens. So I grew curious about Zebra-G nibs. These are carbon steel (so not corrosion resistant) dip pen nibs that can be fitted onto fountain pens with feeds. I was curious about them and with single nibs available for just ยฃ2.50 on Ebay I decided to have a go.

The nib is immediately impressive; long, slender, coming to a pin sharp point. This has no tipping material and is bare steel. There are three slots across the midpoint, the side ones having cut outs on the outside to allow for more flex.

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The slender point and cut out make it easy to flex. I wonder if the lack of chrome in stainless steel makes carbon steel more flexi?

Following some online instructions I mounted it in a Jinhao x450 pen. My pen has a slightly insecure cap, so I was happy to treat it as expendable for the project. I seated the nib deep on the feed as advised and with some finger force got it back in the section.

I used a converter to load with Noodlers Bulletproof black. It flowed okay from the nib but initial testing showed the Zebra-G impractical for everyday writing. While pulling down worked fine and had a lot of flex (lines about 2mm wide at full stretch) other directions have issues. Sideways line have a deep scrape on the paper and any attempt to push upwards just stabs into the paper, making โ€˜oโ€™ and โ€˜uโ€™ use problematic.

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Attempted use in the office. Even with my awful writing it was extra hard work. Note the wide underline top left.

It was simply not a nice experience to write with. On top of that there were flow issues, although probably not helped by my choice of ink. I had to prime the nib a couple of times.

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Over primed a bit.

Halfway through the day at work I gave up and switched to a black rollerball. That evening I cleaned the pen and swapped the original nib back. Extracting the Zebra nib required more effort than getting it in, which is common Iโ€™m led to believe.

In fairness this was an experiment, and a cheap one at that. If you want a cheap flex nib this is not a way to that. If you use your fountain pen for art or calligraphy then this may be an interesting tool for you.

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weirdwalthamstow

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Namisu Ixion

Having backed other Namisu Kickstarter projects (Nexus, X01 rollerball (to be reviewed!)) and buying an ebonite Nova (also to be reviewed, some day) I was first in line to back the Ixion project. Hoever it was a problematic project, running late with component issues and many thought an insufficient level of contact from Namisu. Personally having had good experiences with them before and having been on even worse projects I was willing to wait out the issues.

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I went for the entry level version with a steel nib in aluminium, for a total of ยฃ34 with delivery. Brass and titanium with other nib options are available. The Ixion is a clipless fountain pen with a faceted cap (10 facets, I counted). The cap is wider than the barrel so the facets help stop it from rolling (a perpetual issue with the Nexus). It looks a bit like a metal Kaweco Perkeo.ย  I went for the blue body and cap options. I wonder if time will wear the finish on the sharp edges of the facets; there is already visible metal in the cap mouth and barrel threads from capping. The barrel and cap have raw aluminium end finials affixed with internal screws (other options were available). I love the balance this brings to the pen overall. With the cap off the polished aluminium section keeps the balance (Like my ebonite Nova, also to review one day). I find it comfortable to hold. It does not cap securely and frankly I wouldnโ€™t want to risk damaging the barrel finish. Plus when I tried it put the cap end uncomfortably on my knuckle. The pen has a little heft but not enough for me to subjectively call it heavy.

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It comes with a Bock nib (fine if I recall, itโ€™s not marked) and since most every Kickstarter pen uses these I wonโ€™t bother with a writing sample. Mine had the tines noticeably misaligned which I found upon use. Using a bit of fingernail pressure I got them sorted but I donโ€™t think itโ€™s quite right. I wonder if they rushed the installations to get the pens delivered? Iโ€™ve been using it with Waterman Serenity Blue and it has worked mostly fine; it has occasionally railroaded.

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The Ixion did not come with a converter or cartridge, which is fine. It did come with a branded nylon pouch which is really neat. The blue lining matches the pen and gives me a great way to carry it to work and keep it unscratched in my desk drawer.

Overall the Ixion is a nice pen at a reasonable price. Iโ€™m happy with the options I chose.

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weirdwalthamstow

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Jinhao Shark Pen

Sharrrrrk pennnnnnnnn!

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In use writing a shopping list

Well, thatโ€™s what it felt like when Jinhao introduced this novelty pen on to the market. And like many in FP fandom I just couldnโ€™t say no. Especially at its Ebay price of just 99p.

It comes in many colours; I went for a green. The grip section is transparent and tinted to match the barrel. It has two facets for the first finger and thumb of the traditional tripod grip. The cap screws on in three rotations. It has a shark shape (the face looks a bit unamused to me) with a dorsal fin acting as a roll stop in absenceย  of a clip. On the bottom is moulded Jinhao and the logo, but with little definition. The tapered barrel is plan and unadorned. The pen comes with the standard Jinhao converter, which has been fine in the models Iโ€™ve used it in. Actually the barrel seems airtight and with all plastic construction this would be a good candidate for eye dropper conversion.

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The barrel makes for quite a long pen, nearly 13cm uncapped.

The nib seems to be a standard model. It has some decorative etching, the Jinhao name and logo. Itโ€™s marked โ€˜Fโ€™ and like other Jinhao nibs is an average stiff writer with reasonable feedback. The feed is black plastic, not transparent like some other Chinese pens. Iโ€™ve been using Noodlers Sequoia Green in it and for one converter full it has had no issues feeding.

Yes, itโ€™s a novelty pen. But itโ€™s cheap, fun and works well. And If you feel the need to shout โ€œShark pen!โ€ and hum the theme from โ€˜Jawsโ€™ this is very much a pen for you.

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weirdwalthamstow

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