Having found a cheap and plentiful source of very small quantities of oil-based ink, some more experimenting was done. Especially some colored inks; a discount-store had a brand set of colored ballpint pens for a few Euro.
These are very easy to take apart - twist and pull gets the top off and it all comes apart. The nib can be pulled out of the white tube easily (and pushed back too, they re-assemble equally easily).
The typing quality is definitely not on the level of a typebar machine with ribbon inking. On the other hand the typewheel used here is new, made with a 0.08 mm layering. (The Attic typeface used here is also a bit too ornate for typewriters perhaps.) Earlier experimenting with water-based ink and heavy inking gave much better writing, but were impractical because of soaking through the paper and drying out within the day (or hour!).
Looking closely at an original typewheel's type ('slug'), the top is not sharp as a typebar machine's type, but has a definite flat surface facing the paper. That flat surface is probably by-design. That surface is there to take the ink and act as the stamp. Ribbon-inked machines that work on impact do not need this flat surface, the impact onto the ribbon material presses ink onto the paper.
The needs of the 'stamping' process will be behind the typing advice given in the Blickensderfer instruction manual. On a regular ribbon-inked machine the typing is 'staccato'; the fingers strike the keys to fling the type against the ribbon and paper at speed, to rebound immediately. The inking is done by impact; near-instanteneous. On the Blickensderfer typing should be not by striking the keys, but rather by pressing them down - the type should be pressed against the paper to act as a stamp. This will be needed to give the ink time to transfer onto the paper, as in stamping. It's explained in the manual: the key must be followed down until the type is stopped by the paper.
Even though pens give low-cost oil-based inks (which oil?) and do work, the ink of these particular colored pens is not great - too runny and relatively light on colorant. Current impression is that the BIC Cristal inks are better suited for the Blickensderfer; thicker, sticky and very dense. Also the type itself on newly-made wheels can perhaps be optimised for the printing process.
Another realisation is that ribbon-inking is a very good, robust solution for typing.
More tinkering (playing) may be possible on getting this Blickensderfer 5 to type as it would have done 120 years ago :-)

















































