Well, get your hands on some G2s in the .38 width.
The .38 is about the smallest width that I'm comfortable using. I was initially worried about gel ink working in a pen this fine, but it seems to flow perfectly well from that tiny point.
The pen itself is the same size as the .7mm version, but you can tell them apart by the clear barrel on the .38. Of course, there's also the "0.38" marking on the clip, and the text is in white instead of gold, but when I'm reaching into my pen cup or backpack I like the distinctly clear barrel as a way to tell them apart.
One of the benefits of the .38 is that you won't get the ink blobs that you occasionally get from the larger width gel pens. As you can see in the pic to the left, the lines that I wrote with the .7 have an ink blob every so often, but the line from the .38 doesn't. I'm not sure why, but it probably has to do with the very fine point on the .38. The pictures above (of the pen's tips) show a bit of blue on the tip of the .7, but no ink at all on the tips of the .38 pens. They'd all been used recently, so it's not the case that they were too new.
This lack of a blob in the .38's line might make it a better pen for a lefty. I don't have any leftys handy to ask, but perhaps one of you can let me know.
The only time I wouldn't use one of these is when I was writing carbon copies. I haven't tried it, but I have a feeling that it might have a tenancy to tear through.
These pens don't cost any more than their larger cousins, but they perform a bit better, and they are going to be suitable for most of your needs. Pick some up.
**I've actually just noticed that they also come in 1.0 and .5 sizes. I have quite a few of these G2s and I don't have any in those sizes. **
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I tried the G2 38 its too scratchy.The .5mm G2 is the perfect point, no skipping,smearing or blotching.
G2 .38 is both scratchy and noisy, I really love the thin lines though.
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