Greetings from Greece, this pen is so simple and good looking it could make it as pen of the month IMO. That would be a first!A simple dip pen, my first foray into turning. A gift for a friend. Mix of CP and Grade 9 titanium. Welded and turned. Fits a #6 nib. Case is Grade 9 titanium with a turned wood cap. My aesthetic runs modern/minimal/industrial.
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Thanks, Mark! Glad you like it and appreciate the feedback.Very, very nice - I'm a fan.![]()
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Thank you, Mike. Appreciate you liking the simplicity of it.Greetings from Greece, this pen is so simple and good looking it could make it as pen of the month IMO. That would be a first!
Thanks, Kevin. I mean, do you ever really have to justify buying a new tool?Damn.....love it. Hate it even more as its just one more really good argument as to why I need to invest in a metal lathe......grrrr....
Nice work! Welcome from NJ !!
Kevin
Thank you! Right now the pen is padded by felt inside the tube.Very nice. Does the pen mount in the tube?
How difficult is it to machine Ti? What types of tooling do you use?
Thanks
Thanks for the info, maybe someday when my skills improveThank you! Right now the pen is padded by felt inside the tube.
Ti isn't too difficult to work with but has some quirks. It has to be turned slower than carbon steels, brass or bronze. It work hardens and it's "sticky" so cutting threads can present challenges, and it easily galls. CP (commercially pure) is much easier to work with than Grade 9 (3Al-2.5V). Grade 5 (6Al-4V) is harder and dulls tools faster. I use carbide and HSS tools.