Now, six years later, I want to complete the information with the description of a pen produced in that Brazilian plant of Pilot´s--the Pilot 77.
This pen is indeed a member of the Super family of pens made by Pilot in the late 1950s and early 1960s. In fact, its nib is remarkably similar --if not the same-- to the unit present in the model Super 150, a late arrival to the family. The difference is that the Brazilian nib is made of steel instead of gold, and is not dated.
The filling system is the well-known "hose-shiki" that we can find in Pilot pens between 1955 and 1964. The body, made of plastic, carries the inscription "PILOT 77 / IND. BRASILEIRA".
Two questions arise in here: When the pen was made, and whether it was manufactured in Brazil or just assembled with parts made in Japan.
To the first, my best guess given the simmilarities with the Super 150, is that this Brazilian (Super) 77 was made in the mid 1960s.
To the second, I am inclined to think that the parts were Japanese and were assembled in Brazil. The reason being that there are no differences between the components of this pen and those seen on the Japanese units.
These are the dimensions of this pen:
Length closed: 132 mm
Length open: 118 mm
Length posted: 147.5 mm
Diameter: 11.2 mm
Weight: 13.9 g (dry)
Ink deposit: 0.6 ml
Pilot do Brasil remains in business as producer of stationery goods. However, and despite the new manufacturing plant open in 2013, Pilot do Brasil does not make fountain pens nowadays, and the only fountain pen-related item produced in that plant is fountain pen ink in blue in bottles of 500 ml (::1::, ::2::).
My thanks to my friend Panchovel.
Romillo WiPens – Montblanc Irish Green
Bruno Taut
Madrid, November 24th, 2019
etiquetas: Brasil, Pilot, tinta
Bruno Taut
Madrid, November 24th, 2019
etiquetas: Brasil, Pilot, tinta
4 comments:
Pilot do Brasil also produced a model called 88.
Thanks, Rico99. I will look for it.
Cheers,
BT
I just purchased vintage Pilot vp IND BRASILERIA. The nib is metal and the pen came with converter which is not the con-w converter, that supplied with the Japanese pens.
Thanks, Anonymous,
I guess you meant a Vanishing Point or Capless. If so, congratulations. I just wrote a text on those unusual Capless pens.
Cheers,
BT
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