Texatdurango
Member
Just sharing some thoughts.....
In another thread Jeremy showed us his beautiful pen with an ink window. He was asked how it was done and mentioned that he did his similar to the way I do mine so rather than derail his thread I thought I would start another thread to show this photo.
There are two things I hope you take away from this post, one of course is to see how you can make an ink window using clear acrylic tube and second is to NEVER clean the inside of the tube with denatured alcohol.
The top item is a clear demo body I made several years ago that cracked into a million pieces when I ran a swab soaked in alcohol inside. I just swabbed it again a few minutes ago and the cracks got worse so it obviously doesn't matter when you do it.
The bottom item is an ink window I made for a bulb filler pen. After taking 30 minutes to cut and thread the piece, I applied shellac to glue the bulb on and wanted to make sure nothing got inside the tube so I grabbed a swab and soaked it in alcohol to clean the inside when... BAM, it cracked in three places.
I'm no chemist so don't know why these cracked, they weren't hot, and as I stated, I just rubbed the inside of the top piece minutes ago, easily three years after the first cracks and it cracked more so I don't know why, I just know it cracks.
I think I had a total of three or four pieces crack like this so I just quit using alcohol all together to clean the barrels. Perhaps it's the particular brand of acrylic I use, perhaps it's the brand or strength of alcohol or that I'm just left handed and things like this happen to me now and then.
Back to the ink window briefly, I've made a few windows from rod stock where I drill out the inside, sand and polish until clear but that's more work than I care to dedicate to each pen so I usually use acrylic thick wall tubing where the hole is already drilled and polished.
I use fine threads such as .5mm and glue my pieces together. Even using glue on the threads, I still want the fine pitch thread so as never to leak a drop of ink. Once the window is glued into the body, either at the top, bottom or middle, I remount the blank in a collet chuck and sand everything smooth to where you can't feel the seams, and polish until the window is crystal clear.
In another thread Jeremy showed us his beautiful pen with an ink window. He was asked how it was done and mentioned that he did his similar to the way I do mine so rather than derail his thread I thought I would start another thread to show this photo.
There are two things I hope you take away from this post, one of course is to see how you can make an ink window using clear acrylic tube and second is to NEVER clean the inside of the tube with denatured alcohol.
The top item is a clear demo body I made several years ago that cracked into a million pieces when I ran a swab soaked in alcohol inside. I just swabbed it again a few minutes ago and the cracks got worse so it obviously doesn't matter when you do it.
The bottom item is an ink window I made for a bulb filler pen. After taking 30 minutes to cut and thread the piece, I applied shellac to glue the bulb on and wanted to make sure nothing got inside the tube so I grabbed a swab and soaked it in alcohol to clean the inside when... BAM, it cracked in three places.
I'm no chemist so don't know why these cracked, they weren't hot, and as I stated, I just rubbed the inside of the top piece minutes ago, easily three years after the first cracks and it cracked more so I don't know why, I just know it cracks.
I think I had a total of three or four pieces crack like this so I just quit using alcohol all together to clean the barrels. Perhaps it's the particular brand of acrylic I use, perhaps it's the brand or strength of alcohol or that I'm just left handed and things like this happen to me now and then.
Back to the ink window briefly, I've made a few windows from rod stock where I drill out the inside, sand and polish until clear but that's more work than I care to dedicate to each pen so I usually use acrylic thick wall tubing where the hole is already drilled and polished.
I use fine threads such as .5mm and glue my pieces together. Even using glue on the threads, I still want the fine pitch thread so as never to leak a drop of ink. Once the window is glued into the body, either at the top, bottom or middle, I remount the blank in a collet chuck and sand everything smooth to where you can't feel the seams, and polish until the window is crystal clear.
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