Past July, I wrote a text –
“From Shizuoka”— about the small pen maker by the name of Masahiro Seisakusho.
Its website, I said at the time, was only written in Japanese and was also very confusing. That, together with
some questions asked on the Fountain Pen Network made that Chronicle of mine extremely popular. I wonder now if that new information translated into more sales…
A thick Masahiro. The engraving on the nib is the only brand sign.
Anyway, another Masahiro pen became available for me to inspect, and writing about it was only natural.
On this occasion we have one of the bigger models, and therefore it implements a
Pilot size 15 nib. The body, as usual on this brand, is made of (probably) German ebonite.
The nib is a typical Pilot unit: "PILOT / 14K-585 / 15 / < F > ". Closer to the section, the manufacturing date: 314.
However, despite the size of the nib –similar to a Bock size 6, or a Pelikan M800—, it seems too small for the very wide pen body. Sure enough, its girth allows for a big amount of ink thanks also to the old fashioned and efficient
A-shiki filling system. This system, let’s remember, was briefly used by Pilot in the 1950s, although it is very common nowadays in the form of the
Pilot’s CON-70 converter.
As was the case with the other Masahiro pen here analyzed, the feed is made of ebonite, which is a significant change with respect to Pilot pens implementing these nibs, whose feed are made of plastic.
These are the dimensions of this Masahiro pen made in Shizuoka:
Length closed: 143mm
Length open: 133 mm
Length posted: 170 mm
Diameter: 17 mm
Weight: 43.9 g (inked)
The tail of the pen is the handle of the pulsated piston (A-shiki
system).
Pens like this go over JPY 100000 (actually, almost JPY 110000), according to
Masahiro’s website. Now, it is up to us to decide whether this pen is a good value and how it compared to Pilot pens with the same nib.
My thanks to Mr. Minagawa.
Romillo Nervión – Sailor Blue Iron
Bruno Taut
Shinjuku, October 11th 2017
labels: Masahiro, Pilot