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317 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3063
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Title: HPR3063: Pens, pencils, paper and ink - 1
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3063/hpr3063.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 16:06:07
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3,063 for Wednesday 29 April 2020. Today's show is entitled Pen,
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Pencils, Paper and Ink one inch,
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and is part of the series, The Art of Writing. It is hosted by Dave Morris,
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and is about 15 minutes long
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and carries an explicit flag. The summary is
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looking at a few more of my writing implements.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by archive.org.
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Support universal access to all knowledge by heading over to archive.org forward slash donate.
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Music
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Hello everybody. Welcome to Hacker Public Radio. This is Dave Morris.
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Now today I've got a show which is, I guess, the second on the same subject.
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It's about pens and pencils and stationary type things. I've called it pens, pencil, paper and ink.
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It's been four years since I did one on this subject. It was show 1,941,
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and it was released in January 2016.
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I've been meaning to do this all that time, but I don't know.
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It's the case of getting the motivation to do some of these things, but anyway I'm motivated now.
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I thought it was worth coming back and talking about this a little bit more
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because I've acquired some new pens and pencils and stuff
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and been collecting ink and paper and notebooks and stuff in the interim.
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And I thought it was useful just to talk about some of these things for those who are interested in the subject.
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As I was putting this together I realised there was more information here than
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where I could put together into one show.
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So I've turned it into three shows which hopefully aren't going to be too long.
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It means I can add more shows to the group if I buy more pens or have any more things to share with you.
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So what three fountain pens I'm going to talk about today.
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The first one is German brand called Lami, L-A-M-Y.
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I think I called it Lami when I first came across it, but the German pronunciation is Lami and I'm given to believe.
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These are very popular. They're all over the place.
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It's a good start pen and the price is quite reasonable.
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I decided to get one because a lot of people have been saying that they loved it
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and I wanted to give it a shot.
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I must say I'm not wild about it.
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I don't like the fact that it's got a triangular cross section in the finger grip area
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and I don't find it enormously comfortable.
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But others find this to be maybe one of the best features.
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It means that the pen's always in the right orientation for the nib and that type of thing.
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I guess it's what you used to really.
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I probably could train myself to get on with this if I used to pen a lot.
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The nib on the one I bought is classified as extra fine.
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But I really like a fine pen because my writing tends to be fairly small.
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And this one feels a little bit coarser than I like.
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But again, I'm probably overly fussy in this area
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and I've been spoiled by having a range of Japanese pens.
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In the Japanese range, the things they define as a fine nib
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others would define as extra fine.
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This German extra fine is what I would call a medium.
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But there's no absolute something that's just a matter of opinion.
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This particular pen takes either a cartridge or a converter.
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And I bought the converter at the same time that I bought the pen.
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And it costs under 20 pounds.
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It's a transparent so-called demonstrator pen.
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And I bought the converter for around about 5 pounds when I bought it.
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I don't know what the prices are now probably a little bit more.
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But I've shown a picture of the pen itself.
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Yeah, there's a picture of it with its cab off and a close-up of the nib.
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Which is quite a nice designer thing.
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One of the things about these is you can take the nib off quite easily.
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It's the case of grabbing it and pulling.
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And you can buy the single nibs, different sizes and so forth.
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And you can just pop it back on different ones.
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So that's fairly rare in the fountain pen world, actually.
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So that's another plus point for this particular pen.
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And there are loads and loads of different sorts of safaris in different colors.
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Not transparent, solid color and all sorts of things.
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It does have a lot going for it.
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It just doesn't quite hit the spot as far as I'm concerned.
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But I've done an example of the writing.
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And to me that looks fairly chunky in terms of the stroke width.
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And it also needs the right sort of paper.
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This is a classy paper I'm using in my demos of grid, gridded paper.
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But I'll talk about paper in another show.
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So the second pen, Twisbee.
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I mentioned the Twisbee brand in my last show.
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And spoke about the one I'd bought called the Eco,
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which is a really good value piston filling pen, which I enjoy a lot.
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But since then I've acquired another one called a VAC 700.
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The VAC 700 is no longer made, which is unfortunate I think.
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Though I think some stockers seem to have older stock or something like that.
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There is a VAC mini, which has replaced the 700.
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The 700 is a big, big pen.
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And the mini is a more compact pen.
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For the view I get of the range of this stuff,
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it comes from Taiwan originally, is filtered by what people stock in the UK.
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So there may be quite a range of different designs.
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But the two that I see in the various catalogs at the moment,
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the 700 is clear acrylic, and that's the only form you can get.
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And the mini is either in clear or smokey type acrylic.
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The thing about these pens, and the Twisbee VAC, I'll talk about,
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is that they have an unusual vacuum filling mechanism.
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So the principle of it is that you unscrew a plunger,
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which is normally locked in position, unscrew it,
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then you pull the plunger out from the end of the pen.
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And then you push it forward, and as you push it forward,
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it creates a vacuum.
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And if the nib is in ink as you're doing this,
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then the sudden release of the vacuum causes a good amount of ink to be drawn in.
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Problem is, though, it's a big barrel on this particular pen,
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and it doesn't fill totally if you do it in an ordinary ink bottle.
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So there's a special ink bottle, which you can screw on to the pen,
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which lets you fill it almost completely.
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So I got one of these, and I have a picture of it later on.
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It's called the VAC-20A.
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There are various YouTube videos that show things about this,
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and I've linked one of them from an American company called the Gulae Pen Company,
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showing how you would fill such pen with one of these bottles.
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The bottle they use is the earlier version of the one I have called the VAC-20,
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which only fitted the VAC-700.
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The one I have also fitted the VAC Mini.
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I'm going to talk any more about it.
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If you're interested, you can go and check it out on the YouTube video.
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So there's pictures of the Twisbee with its cap on.
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It's got ink in. I inked it up a while ago, actually,
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and it's one of the great things about this is it doesn't dry out.
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A lot of pens, if you leave them inked and don't use them for a few weeks,
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you've come back to them and they've dried up.
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Actually, the lami is bad for that.
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You really need to flush it out and dry it and put it away if you're not using it.
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With the cap off, you can see it's got quite a chunky nib,
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and I do a close up of it. It's a fine nib.
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It writes wonderfully. I love this pen.
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It's one of my real favourites.
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It's a picture of the 28 ink bottle, which is a strange looking thing,
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but you can actually leave the ink in it, which is what I do.
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The handwriting sample shows that it's an extra fine nib.
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I forgot about that.
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I used an ink from the company Diamine, which is called ASA Blue,
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which is a nice colour I reckon.
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One of the things about the pen is when you finish writing with it,
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when you finish filling it, indeed.
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You need to make sure that the plunger,
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which by the time you finish this fully in again,
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the end should be screwed down.
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But when you want to write with it,
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you should just slacken off the thread at the end,
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because otherwise the plunger is pressed up quite tightly against the end of the barrel,
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which doesn't allow ink to flow through to the nib,
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which is great, because it means your pen's not likely to leak into the cap,
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whatever, as you're carrying it around.
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But you do need to remember to take that pressure off to allow ink to flow.
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Some people hate that.
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You have to fiddle with it.
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Personally, I don't know why I really struck with this pen.
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I liked it a lot.
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My son had it originally, this one, and he didn't like it.
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And I showed it to me and I said,
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I could really go with it.
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He said, well, do you want it?
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Because I had to give him some money for it.
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Of course, that's what you do, isn't it?
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If you wanted to buy one of these new in the UK,
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they're around about 75 pounds,
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and the ink bottle is under 15.
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The VAC Mini is around 60 pounds at the moment,
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just having a quick look at some of the sellers.
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So these are not overly cheap pens,
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but I just really quite like third fountain pen,
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then is from a Japanese company called Pilot.
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You make some amazing pens,
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some of which are astonishingly expensive.
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This one's called the Pilot Custom Heritage 92.
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So this pen is a piston filler,
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and I described the piston filling mechanism in the last show.
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It's a movable piston,
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which is operated through a twist cap on the end.
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My son is very keen on Japan,
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and he and his girlfriend went to Japan in 2017 or 2018.
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They took a year out to do some travel,
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went to New Zealand as well.
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I think they started in Japan.
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Anyway, around about that time,
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they saw this pen and bought it for me as a present.
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If you want to buy this in the UK,
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it's really quite expensive,
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but the prices in Japan are apparently quite a lot lower.
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It's an acrylic pen.
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It's a demonstrator that, as you can see,
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see through its clear.
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This one is a blue,
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it's got a bluer acrylic.
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In the UK, you can only get the clear version of it.
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The nib is a very fine one.
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I'm not sure what it's made of,
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but if you buy it in the UK,
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the tip is apparently gold,
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but I've no idea what this one is.
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The pen has a real high quality feel to it,
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to my way of thinking,
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it's not overly large,
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and it's one where I like to put the cap on the end of the barrel,
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posting, they call it.
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I've got some pictures,
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which show it with the cap on,
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with the cap off,
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and then a close-up of the nib.
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You can see that it's marked as fine,
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which in Japanese terms is extra fine
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and compared to European pens.
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The other picture is that,
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my son is a girlfriend,
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leather items, quite skillful with their leather-making stuff,
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and they've very kindly made me a leather carry-in case
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to go with the pen,
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so I just thought I would give you a picture of what that turned out.
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And there's a bit of a writing sample,
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it's using an ink cord
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from a company called J'ère-Bère French company,
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and the ink is called Bluer Péravanche.
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It's probably the crappiest French accent ever,
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but I think it means blue periwinkle.
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I want to talk about this ink a little bit more
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in another show.
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If you buy this in the UK,
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with a clear acrylic,
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with a gold nib,
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costs around 175 pounds,
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but I don't believe it,
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it costs anything like that in Japan.
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So, I also have,
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because this is meant to be about writing stuff in general.
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At Ballpoint pen,
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I bought one of these,
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you're so back.
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I don't have a whole lot of Ballpoint pens,
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because on the whole,
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I don't find the right to spectacularly well,
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and they don't totally suit my handwriting.
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I normally prefer fountain pens,
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or gel pens, or rollerball pens,
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not Ballpoint so much.
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I think it's something to do with that,
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that ink, strange sticky ink.
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Anyway, this one is called the Trica Construction.
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Quite pretty looking,
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it's a bit of a novelty though.
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It's made of metal,
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it's quite chunky,
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it has a six-sided barrel
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with a twist tip
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for extending and retracting the Ballpoint,
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and the barrel can be as the ruler,
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and it's got imperial metric measurements on it.
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It's got a spirit level in it,
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which you can't really see in my picture.
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Not enough light, really.
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The end of the pen is fitted with a sort of rubbery pad,
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which is not an eraser,
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but is think for clicking on touch screens.
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And if you take the cab off,
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there's a little double-ended screwdriver inside there,
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which is quite neat.
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It can't have used it a lot though.
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It's held in magnetically,
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and the magnet is not that good.
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So as a pen, there's nothing very special.
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It takes a D1 refilt,
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which are quite small tubes of ink
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with the Ballpoint tip.
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And I bought the thing,
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and I was quite excited with it when I got it,
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and then I sort of got less enthusiastic about it
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over the time I've had it.
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I just keep it around for writing notes
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and that type of thing.
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Just quick things that you write down when an idea occurs to you,
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if you do that sort of thing.
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There's a picture of the pen
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and with its cab off showing the screwdriver.
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So, in conclusion then,
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I've included two of my favourite fountain pens
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in this episode,
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and one that's not a favourite,
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which I'm learning to appreciate more, I hope.
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I do use the Troika, as I've said,
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to make shopping lists and that type of stuff,
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but I don't think I'd recommend it,
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unless you really like novelty pens.
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It's not cheap.
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I can't remember how much it was,
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but it was over £20,
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and I don't think it's warranted to be honest with you.
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So, what I'm going to do is to stop now,
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and next show in this group,
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I'm going to talk about a few more fountain pens
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and a few other related issues.
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And there's, I think,
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three shows will probably do it, hopefully anyway.
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All right then, that's it.
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Bye.
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