Dip Nibs vs. Tipped Nibs

Dip Nibs vs. Tipped Nibs

Posted by Charles Ackerman on

There are several differences between dip nibs and tipped nibs on fountain pens.They are both designed to move ink to the tip of the nib, but they do this in different ways that are important to understand. 
  1. Fountain pen nibs are fed ink from inside the fountain pen. Dip nibs are periodically dipped into a container of ink.
  2. Fountain pen nibs transport ink down the channel from the breather hole to the tip Dip nibs transport ink from the entire surface of the nib to the tip. 
  3. Fountain pen nibs are one part of a larger mechanism. The other parts are the feed and the section. Dip nibs work all by themselves.  
  4. Fountain pen nibs are usually symmetrical on the horizontal axis. A straight line can often run across the top of a nib from the back to the front. Dip nibs can have a convoluted surface geometry, especially when the tip bends down for extra flex. 
  5. Fountain pen nibs are built to last. Dip nibs are not. A fountain pen nib is usually made from material such as gold alloy, bronze, or stainless steel that can last 100 years. Dip nibs are usually made from cheap spring steel that can bend, snap or rust in a few days. 
  6. Fountain pen nibs are tipped with durable material so they can move in all directions (360 degrees). Dip nibs are not tipped. Often they are finely pointed to draw hairlines. This means they cannot move in any direction. They are usually constrained to a scope of less than 90 degrees or one quarter of a circle.
  7. Fountain pen nibs are easier to control. Dip nibs are more sensitive to the slightest change hand pressure and direction. Dips nibs can fly out of control easily. It takes longer to learn how to draw with dip nibs than fountain pen nibs.  

    All this means sticking a dip nib into a fountain pen is not sufficient to get the dip nib to behave like a fountain pen nib. Most dip nibs will never behave like fountain pen nibs. That's good in one sense. You can get more expressive lines from flexible dip nibs.

    That's bad in another sense because it's difficult to tame dip nibs and get the most out of them. Dip nibs can have a mind of their own. They can draw marvelously beautiful lines, but they can also rust, bend and snap, splattering ink everywhere. 

    Cheers and Happy Scribbling! 

    ← Older Post

    Leave a comment

    From the Blog

    RSS
    Preparing Dip Nibs for Use With Our Fountain Pens
    Fountain Pens Nibs

    Preparing Dip Nibs for Use With Our Fountain Pens

    By Charles Ackerman

    Get in the habit of preparing dip nibs each time you use them. When you are using a new dip nib for the first time,...

    Read more
    Expanding the Flow of Ink Through Quill Nibs
    Ink Nibs

    Expanding the Flow of Ink Through Quill Nibs

    By Charles Ackerman

    Have you ever wondered how to expand the flow of ink through quill nibs? When you use a quill nib in an Ackerman pen, such...

    Read more