Good Quality Broad FP nib

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dbriski

Member
Joined
Oct 19, 2006
Messages
359
Location
Garden Grove, CA, USA.
A customer of mine would like a broad nib for her next pen. I have made a pen with the standard Jr. Gents Nib and a Baron that I replaced the nib with a Heritance SF steel nibs, both of which she liked (the SF steel one especially). Lou only has Fine and Medium, CS has broad and calligraphy nibs for their Jr. Series. Are these good nibs or is there a better one I can get (<$15)?
 
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Custom grinding can make a nib finer, but never broader than the original tipping, unless you are willing to pay to have it re-tipped. That said, any nib can be made to write smoothly with proper tuning.
 
Custom grinding can make a nib finer, but never broader than the original tipping, unless you are willing to pay to have it re-tipped. That said, any nib can be made to write smoothly with proper tuning.

I don't find this to be true. I have converted several medium nibs to broad by judicious use of Micromesh.

Dan
 
You can grind the round ball to make it flat (italic) to take advantage of the full width of the tipping material, but it is impossible to grind it to be wider than the original tipping material.

You can certainly adjust the ink flow and writing speed so the written line is wider, but the tipping material itself cannot be increased in size.
 
I bought the calligraphy nib from CSUSA for my wife and if you tune it and do some smoothing it does good. Its not as good as Lou's but its not in the high price rang. I think its about $10.00. If you are going to do a few fountain pens there are good threads in the forum.
 
Just to clarify, I have taken several of Lou's medium nibs, ground a larger radius to the ball tipping, and ended up with a nib which produces a significantly wider line than the original, and feels quite smooth on paper. Of course the tipping didn't get any larger, but because of the larger radius, more ink was transferred to the paper. I suppose it might be sort of a cross between a stub and a standard point, but the line is at least as wide, if not wider, than the broad nib from Berea.

However, knowing that Brian has broads, I would try his before going this route.

Dan
 
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