Platinum launched the initial 3776 model, designed by Haruo Umeda, in 1978. Sailor was already using 21 K gold on nail-shaped nibs that would last for many a decade longer. And Pilot was in the transition between the old nail-shaped nibs and new geometries, while keeping the inlaid nibs of some Elite and Custom pens. And then, the new Custom and the Custom Grandee models became the workhorses of the company in 1978. This later model was exported to some markets overseas.
Another advertisement of the Custom Grandee (1978). It shows the seven available nib points. Picture taken from Lambrou and Sunami's Fountain Pens of Japan (2012. ISBN: 978-0-9571230-0).
The Custom Grandee line of pens was composed by seven different nib points, including a three-tine music nib. And this is the example on display today. This pen was a cartridge-converter pen, equipped with a 14 K gold nib, a snap-on cap, and a flat-top shape. The original price was JPY 7000.
This three-tine nib is slightly –but clearly— flexible and has quite sharp edges, thus becoming almost a cursive pen. It provides a remarkable line variation.
These are its dimensions:
Length closed: 137 mm
Length open: 122 mm
Length posted: 150 mm
Diameter: 13 mm
Weight: 19 g (with inked CON-50 converter)
Ink deposit: 0.9 ml (cartridge), 0.8 ml (CON-20), 0.6-0.7 ml (CON-50)
This model has a weak point. The ring on the section is metal plated, but the quality of the plating is very poor and easily chips off. It is in fact very difficult to find a unit with this ring in good condition. The music nib, though, is well-worth this cosmetic inconvenient. Later music nibs, like those in the current models Custom 74 and Custom 742, are a lot rounder on their edges and do not offer the line variation of this Custom Grandee.
The nib of this unit is dated as having been made at Hiratsuka factory (Kanagawa prefecture) on November 1982.
Platinum Century, music nib – Platinum Pigment Blue
Bruno Taut
Shinjuku, August 12th 2013
labels: Pilot, plumín, plumín musical
Bruno Taut
Shinjuku, August 12th 2013
labels: Pilot, plumín, plumín musical
5 comments:
Oh!
I am in love with music nibs. I think I will get Platinum.
I do not see a Pilot Deluxe in your collection. Weren't the Grandee and Deluxe contemporaries?
There are many pens I do not have. I am not sure which model is that Deluxe you mention. I look forward to knowing more.
Cheers,
BT
It is mentioned on the 1984 and 1977 Pilot Catalogues on kamisama. It came in a variety of finishes, including wood and urushi coated ones. I am not sure what nibs were available on it. The nib is, I believe, the same ones used on the Pilot Deluxe Urushi pens in production even today.
By the way, thank you for all the information on Japanese pens you have put up here!
The Grandee appears on some documents around 1980. Therefore they should be contemporaries.
Thanks for passing by and commenting. Hope you choose a better name next time!
BT
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