Uni-ball uni PIN Fine Line Drawing Pen 0.05mm Black
462 ratings
TO EXPLORE MORE
Price: £2.25
Brand: Uni-ball
Description: The uni-ball PIN is an excellent value drawing pen which features uni-ball's signature fade proof and water resistant Super Ink. Uni Pin Fine Liners can easily be used with watercolour work as the ink will not smudge when wet. The wide range of nib sizes available in the PIN range mean you can create several line widths making the uni-ball essential to creating contrast and is a fantastic addition to your art supplies. The nib is supported and protected by steel meaning the PIN drawing pens are long-lasting and will not be damaged from use with stencils. - Ideal for drawing, technical drawing, outlining and sketchbook doodles - Nib sizes available: 0.05mm - Durable steel nibs - Also available in sets - Ink colour: Black. Uni-ball uni PIN Fine Line Drawing Pen 0.05mm Black - shop the best deal online on craftcompare.co.uk
Category: Office Supplies
Merchant: London Graphic Centre
Product ID: L-0835150001
Colour: Black
EAN: 4902778798805
MPN: 798801000
My website utilises affiliate links when you click my 'Get the best deal now' buttons. If you buy something through one of these links, I may earn a little commission, at no extra cost to you.
I have relationships with many of the top online retailers (purchasing, shipping and returns will be handled directly by them) which enables me to offer the best deal online for the Uni-ball uni PIN Fine Line Drawing Pen 0.05mm Black and many other similar products - which will appear below, to enhance your online shopping experience.
For even more great deals on Uni-ball Office Supplies, click the link.
Author: Aijaz Ahmad
Rating: 5
Review: brilliant this is had my doubts at first whether calling it 0.05 mm the narrowest thinnest pen have ever encountered was just misadvertising or just an accepted fake measurement just overlooked by most purchasers but NO it was niggling me so had some doubts so got out my microscope set it on 75x min settings dont need too high a setting then placed it under a plastic transparent template with millimetre scale divided by tenths of a millimetre you know really small looking at with the naked eye but HUNDRED MICROMETREs (microns) each quite big when measuring microscopic bugs spores bacteria etc anyway after a few trial and error attempts you have to really be slow and careful moving the nib in and out or sideways so it just gets picked up by the viewing lens measured it at around 0.35 to 0.40 mm just under half a mm to around a third (or slightly more) of a millimetre which made me think "see" they were wildly exaggerrating BUT then drew a line across the template scale and then measured it and it comfortably fit between a tenth millimetre scale gap arriving at the conclusion that it the width of the drawn line was much narrower than the nib estimating it at around 0.06mm to .08 mm which is nearly the width advertised very pleased an elated at the measurement measured some more lines so theoretically if you drew a line quite fast on a smooth surface you could actually arounf 0.04 mm which is even less than the advertised thickness the faster and lightly pressured on the nib is the thinner the drawn line wow i thought brilliant relieved i thought id open up the pen using a wire cutter grip with the pen wrapped in some tissue paper pulled the tight top off opposite end of the nib and used a tweezer like forcep to pull out the well you can say cartridge more like a long cylinder of cloth soaked in black ink wrapped around by a clear plastic sheet the type used for felt pens and fibre tip pens so when you eventually run out of ink which shouldnt be for a while like the other chap who reviewed it said just use a dropper or a syring probably better and inject a third of the way inside the felt column depending on how much you used it the longer youve used it the deeper the inject and inject about half a millilitre or more of black ink probaly the aqueous kind not too watery not too thick to keep replenishing it there is plenty of ink the chap said 50 detailed sketches for about eight months i have heard parker ballpoint pens have refils that last long with about five miles of ink so this has probably got around a mile or so so if a parker pen gives you around 300 to 400 A4 sheets of lined paper full of writing this pen should give you around 80 lined paper sheets A4 sized plenty to go on may even last more than a year before it dries up so keep that cap on the nib hope that helps insha Allaah
Author: Millasaurus
Rating: 2
Review: Pen worked for all of a couple lines then became really scratchy & missing parts of lines. Not due to overuse or heavy handedness. Disappointed.