Tabs

29 October 2014

OB

Nowadays, Japanese pen companies are probably those offering the widest selection of nib points in their catalogs. Aside of the specialty nibs by Sailor –custom made and not always readily available—, the most brilliant case is Pilot. For size 10 nibs, Pilot offers up to 15 different points. And yet, there are no oblique nibs among them. In fact, oblique nibs are a rarity in Japanese pens, but that does not mean there had not been any.

Here I am showing an example—a Pilot Custom 67 implementing an oblique broad nib.


A full collection of Pilot Custom 67. All the colors, all the nibs.


The Custom 67 with OB nib.

As was explained before on these Chronicles, the 65th anniversary of Pilot was commemorated with the release of the first balance model in modern times. It followed the style of some pre-war Pilots, and was named the Custom 65. This was a limited edition, but was soon followed –in 1985— by the non-limited Custom 67.


On this case, the nib is marked with its size, 5. That was not the case of the music nib previously presented. This nib was manufactured on August of 1992 at the Hiratsuka plant.


The feed, as was the case on the music nib, does not implement the internal core that can be seen on current models.

Nib-wise, this model came with a wide variety of nibs—up to nine of them, as can be seen on the first picture of this Chronicle. Among them, the music nib preciously described, and an oblique broad. Put to work, this OB nib is more of a medium or fine medium than a broad.


Written sample of the OB nib (save the text in violet).

The remaining characteristics of this pen were already described: it is a cartridge-converter pen with a 14 K gold nib, screw in cap, made of plastic.


My thanks to Mr. Fukuyo.


Platinum pocket pen, music nib – Nakajima Sumire-iro

Bruno Taut
Nakano, October 28th 2014
etiquetas: Pilot, plumín

2 comments:

Manteiv said...

Hello! I'm curious how the Pilot Custom 67 UEF writes. How is it compared to other thin nibs like the Platinum 3776 UEF or the Sailor saibi-togi? I couldn't find any more information on this pen.

Bruno Taut said...

Manteiv,

In principle, the writing of the Custom 76 is not very different to that of the Custom 74, butit also depends on how the nibs are tuned.

The Saibi Togi is very different.

Cheers,

BT

Post a Comment

Your comments are welcome and appreciated.