Fountain Pen Converter Air Bubbles
Unlike cartridges bottled inks offer a plethora of choice regarding colours and brands which makes them a rather popular way to refill a fountain pen.
Fountain pen converter air bubbles. Are multiple tiny air bubbles normal. Screw the plunger down and squeeze the air out. I am able to minimize air pockets by filling converters with a craft syringe but its not 100 avoidable part of using a fountain pen.
An ink converter is a device that allows you to refill a fountain pen from bottled ink rather than using the standard ink cartridges. On the reddit fountain pen forum someone told me that the newer con 70 had an agitator. It is also important that you leave the pen in the inkbottle until it is full so that you can avoid any excess air getting within the pen.
This will force air bubbles out of the converter and maximize the amount of ink drawn into the fountain pen. Bottle turn the converter knob counterclockwise to force air out of the converter. Never try to bleed the air bubble the openings are too small for that and you will get inky hands like you already demonstrated.
For most fountain pens converters are the easiest way to experience the hundreds of ink colors that only come in bottles. The bubbles are cause during the air ink exchange from feed to converter. A fountain pen converter is normally filled after it is attached to the pen.
A converter is a device that plugs into a pen like a cartridge and allows the pen to draw in bottled ink through the nib. For the other type of pen you will need to bleed off a few drops of ink after filling in order to get rid of any air bubbles that could be present in the pen. Didn t know if maybe i did something wrong or if there were a way to fix it.
A good count to ten can help you fill your pen. The bubbles in you bottle were from being moved around during shipment. The surfactant causes them to have a long life span nothing to worry about.