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Reform 1745 Review


Juicyjones

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As a prelude I would like to make sure everyone knows I love these little workhorse pens and I'm happy. The review comes across as a bit critical, but I use the same eyes to measure this pen as I would any other one and I am just trying to be thorough, and hopefully helpful to anyone considering getting one. This review is also available at my blog, Spacewater. Click here to read it there. Ok, resume your review now.

 

 

http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2703/4498517708_ea68d746d0_b.jpg

 

I truly love an inexpensive little workhorse pen, so you can imagine how excited I was to order two of these New Old Stock German Piston-fillers from the Fountain Pen Network's own Smeden (a.k.a. Peter). Reform is a strange company. You can buy 1745s and P120s by the freight car but finding anything out about their history is tough indeed.

 

I did find some things out: for anyone interested in the detailed history of Reform, our own Fountain Pen Network user "Kaweco" posted a brief summary just about three years ago in 2007, click here to read his original post and a quote follows.

During the second half of the 20th the KAWECO, one of the world`s greatest writing equipment producers in Heidelberg, Germany, immediately went down and Philipp Mutschler and some of his co-workers decided to leave the firm in 1928 to build up their own factory. 1929 the Kaweco actually went to bancrupty and the "Badische Federhalterfabrik Knust, Grube & Woringen" bought the Kaweco trade mark.

The first calculation of the new Mutschler works sounded fantastic. They had a small building, similar to a shed, 5 turnery machines, a chasing- and a polishing machine and 10 workers. The first real cash flow was expected after 6 weeks! (Today it sounds like: somebody had invented a money printing machine). But they managed it.

1932 was the worst economic year because the world monetary crisis swapped across the pond, but Mutschler expanded and had to build a new factory hall in 1938. They cooperated with the "Reform" works from Nieder- Ramstadt, which had a daughter firm in Heidelberg. After a fusion they changed their trademark from "Certo" to "Reform" with an "R" with wings. Mutschler was one of th first who used the injection moulding process for FP production and therefore they constructed their own machines. Reform delivered complete writing systems and parts to several other well known firms like Geha, Herlitz, Rotring, AT Cross, Elysee, Dunnhill, Dupont, Cartier, Caran d Ache or Christian Dior. They bought the "DEGUSSA"- and the "RUPP" nib factory and produced excellent nibs. Alas, after all nearly nobody knew "Reform".

1963 Otto and Peter, the sons of Philipp Mutschler took over the firm. 10 years later they went to the large old building which once was a part of the Kaweco factory. But in 1999 they had to leave and to sell the house. Reform, a trade mark with its best reputation, which had produced 10 Million fountainpens per year in the early 90th (4 times as much as Lamy) went down. The rescues of Sanford and Ullrich Mutschler failed and the firm went to bancrupty in the late 2003.

The Machines were sold to far east, but the quality of the once produced "Iridium Point Germany" nibs is today only a shadow of the old stuff from Heidelberg. And I am also not sure which of the today sold fountainpens is actually "Reform New old stock"

 

A. Appearance & Design ( 8 / 10 )

 

First glance at these pens was just about what I expected -- green plastic barrels with black plastic cap and section, with two-tone steel nib, size unmarked but most certainly a fine point. Compared to my Pelikan or even my Vanishing Point the first word that comes to mind is definitely "cheap" but I never expected these pens to last a lifetime for this price. The pens came well packaged in a simple envelope from Smeden (a.k.a. Peter) in Finland, wrapped to avoid scratching each other. The pens came to me in pristine condition, truly new old stock. The barrels were shiny and unused, stickers and all, and all the gold-colored plating was unmarred, as were the nibs. The overall fit and finish is very good for pens this inexpensive. I daresay overall a Kaweco Scout is not made nearly as well, notwithstanding manufacturing problems with some of the Reform nibs (see below).

 

The 1745's design is classic Pelikan-style piston filler, with straight lines and a vaguely Pelikan-shaped clip on the very narrow pen. Overall these pens look good, although the plastic is a bit slick in the hands with prolonged writing.

 

http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2729/4466491190_7543a00987_b.jpg

 

 

B. Construction & Quality ( 6 / 10 )

 

For eight dollars you can't expect too much from a pen, and that definitely holds true with the Reform 1745 as well. I originally ordered two Reform 1745s but when they arrived I saw quickly that neither one would write for any significant amount of time. In fact, one of them wouldn't even write when dipped. The short answer reason for this is that the nibs were faulty. Click on the "Nib and Performance" picture below and view the original magnification to see that the nibs were not split down the middle as you might expect. When Peter (FPN's Smeden) found out, he immediately posted me two new pens (that he had obviously tested himself before they left, judging from the water droplets left in the barrels), as well as a bonus Dollar Student Pen for my trouble. Thanks Peter!

 

I eventually ended up with two working pens out of four complete pens sent to me (see below), but other than manufacturing problems with some of the nibs, the fit and finish of the pens is good, all the parts worked smoothly, and everything fit together as it should. I have a bit of a problem sometimes with the posted caps sticking to the blind cap and partially unscrewing the piston, but I soon learned not to post them so hard! Also, the clips tend to unscrew from the end cap as you unscrew them from the barrel or unpost them from the end. Not a huge deal, but I had to get used to grabbing the whole cap to unscrew or unpost it.

 

http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4047/4466491644_53b7573886_b.jpg

 

 

 

C. Weight & Dimensions ( 7.5 / 10 )

 

The pen is 12.95 cm (little over 5 in) capped, and 14.88 cm (5.86 in) posted in length, and the diameter is 1 cm (.390 in) at the body, and .86 cm (.340 in) at the section. It is a small pen, but not uncomfortable to my big hands. The Reform 1745 is a thin pen but not very short. It would be most comfortable in a smaller hand, but this pen is the perfect size for carrying in your organizer or slip in your pocket. Ergonomically, I always feel like I have good control of the pen -- but as I mentioned before the plastic is a bit slippery compared to Ebonite or Celluloid. I have written for extended periods of time with this Reform and I not only enjoy it, I keep coming back to it, even if it is a bit thin.

 

http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4058/4465716471_ba4f1585aa_b.jpg

 

 

 

D. Nib & Performance ( 6 / 10 )

 

It must be said that the nibs on these N.O.S. Reform 1745s are hit-or-miss. A good long soaking, with the pens completely disassembled goes a long way to improving ink flow, but obviously from my experience it's about a 50/50 proposition. Of the four pens I eventually received, I was able to Frankenstein two complete pens ultimately. A nice side effect of this is that I have extra barrels, caps and clips for these two as they wear out from use.

 

Of the two rescued nibs, my favorite one turned out to write a wet fine, with good flow. The pen glides across the page with the perfect amount of tooth and it's a pleasure to write with. The second nib ended up writing a fairly dry extra-fine line. It's not suitable for long writing sessions but it's absolutely perfect for sketching and fine lettering, and so I'm very happy about it.

 

http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2724/4465717017_4a01ba3f1b_b.jpg

 

 

 

 

E. Filling System & Maintenance ( 9 / 10 )

 

It should come as no surprise that the tried-and-true German Piston filling system in the Reform 1745 works exactly as promised. Of the four barrels I have, only one of them was a little faulty -- only drawing up half a cylinder of ink at a time -- so I swapped it with one of my spares. I don't have any way to measure the exact ink capacity of these pens, but it is certainly larger than any converter or cartridge. Piston filling pens really deliver when you have to write a lot, and this pen does the job very well.

 

Maintenance on these pens is beyond easy for such an inexpensive instrument. The ability to fully clean your pens as a feature gets swept under the rug sometimes by pen designers, but the Reform 1745's nibs and feeds are fully removeable from the section with a twist a la Pelikan and Esterbrook. It's hard to see anyone letting these get very dirty of clogged. In fact, the ease of disassembling and cleaning these runs at the head of the pack of reason for my delight with the 1745 because that's why I was able to piece together these two examples.

 

http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4040/4498511256_653c756c97_b.jpg

 

 

 

 

F. Cost & Value ( 10 / 10 )

 

Here is another area where these pens really shine like gems. I paid us$8 each for these, and when Peter (again, FPN's own Smeden) found out my first two were duds he immediately posted two replacements to me, free of charge, from Finland. I can't say enough nice things about Peter, but I will say at least his primary concern was making sure I had working pens that I was happy with. Mission accomplished, thanks Peter!

 

Conclusion ( 7.75 / 10 )

 

If you're reading this review, you're probably considering picking up a couple of these for spares, school, loaners, fun ink colors, or just curiosity. In any case, even with the trouble I had it's hard to argue with the price tag of these well-made, if inconsistent, German piston-fillers. Aside from simply faulty nibs, the only lasting problem I had with these pens was one aenemic plunger, which didn't even interfere with the use of the pen. I would recommend anyone interested pick up several of these. At the prices these go for, they're easily within reach of any curious Fountain Pen user, and for the budget-minded, although it's true that you could spend more and get something 100% reliable out of the box, you will be spending a lot more, not a little more. With a careful initial cleaning and a little luck, you could hardly lay your hands on a more reliable daily writer to toss in your bag.

 

So I give the Reform 1745 a strong buy, but Caveat Emptor, you might have to give it a couple of tries to get one right for you.

 

I welcome your comments and corrections. Thanks.

Edited by Juicyjones

"If we faked going to the Moon, why did we fake it nine times?" -- Apollo 16 astronaut Charlie Duke

 

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Great review, thanks.

And how can this be, because he is the Kwisatz Haderach.

 

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Thanks for the review! I have been thinking about getting one of these. I wondered which nib options are offered. Cheers!

Quan el centre del món no ets ben bé tu (per més que en tinguis la il·lusió),

si et desvetllaven enmig de la nit, no vulguis preguntar-te per què vius:

distreu-te rosegant l'ungla d'un dit. [I beg your pardon, Salvador Espriu]

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Great review. I had no trouble with the Reform pen. It takes a little pre-conditioning to get it to work right. It seems that you have the general concept. The tines may to be opened a bit by using a small shim. I owned three at one point. My biggest complaint is that the pen is too thin. It was a German school pen designed for the hands of small children. On a side note, Lamy's ABC is actually a fat pen, also designed for children. Because the pen is too thin, it started hurting my hand after writing for longer than a few minutes.

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  On 4/7/2010 at 6:20 PM, ToasterPastry said:

Great review. I had no trouble with the Reform pen. It takes a little pre-conditioning to get it to work right. It seems that you have the general concept. The tines may to be opened a bit by using a small shim. I owned three at one point. My biggest complaint is that the pen is too thin. It was a German school pen designed for the hands of small children. On a side note, Lamy's ABC is actually a fat pen, also designed for children. Because the pen is too thin, it started hurting my hand after writing for longer than a few minutes.

 

I felt basically the same -- the thinnness is the hardest thing to cope with ergonomically -- although I write a bit slowly so it doesn't hurt too much. But the best one I was able to recover writes so well it hardly matters. I encourage you to click the link above and zoom all the way into the high-resolution photos of the nibs in question, they're pretty funny -- no amount of soaking can change how the tines are split at the factory unfortunately.

"If we faked going to the Moon, why did we fake it nine times?" -- Apollo 16 astronaut Charlie Duke

 

http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4009/4447835438_d7314170bf_o.png

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Think I got a couple of the buggers for free buying other pens... Nothing not to like about this pen. 2 of my 3 are perfect.

http://i395.photobucket.com/albums/pp38/edbollix/1745_01.jpg

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  On 4/7/2010 at 7:40 PM, edbollix said:

Think I got a couple of the buggers for free buying other pens... Nothing not to like about this pen. 2 of my 3 are perfect.

http://i395.photobucket.com/albums/pp38/edbollix/1745_01.jpg

 

cool! Yeah even with my track record I'm still in love with these babies. Hey and PR Am Blue is on my short list to buy, notice I used PR Midnight Blues above quite a bit.

"If we faked going to the Moon, why did we fake it nine times?" -- Apollo 16 astronaut Charlie Duke

 

http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4009/4447835438_d7314170bf_o.png

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  • 2 weeks later...

Great detailed review - thanks.

I had one of these for a while and it was my favourite pen. Unfortunately, at the weekend, I had it clipped to an inside pocket. The pen unscrewed from the cap and fell into my pocket and I sat on it, bending the nib out of line with the feed. Luckily, I was able to buy replacements (2 this time!) from a UK source on ebay (no affiliation, just a very good experience): http://tinyurl.com/y67hopf

 

I will be taking extra care with the new ones.

 

I remember reading on here that the tip of the nib is coated with protective layer of wax - it certainly seemed to have something on it which I had to rub off by writing before the ink started to flow. Does anyone know anything about this or what's the proper way to remove the wax?

Tombow: Aluminium Object (EF).

Pilot: Green, Black 78G (F); Black 78G (Stub).

Platignum: Green No. 5 Studio.

Reform: 1745 x 2.

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Great and useful review - really like the cleaning pic! Thank you!

*****the dandelion blog is right here*****

*****the dandelion flickr is right here*****

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P. S. I love the use of 'Frankenstein' as a transitive verb! I'm now going to use it at every opportunity.

Tombow: Aluminium Object (EF).

Pilot: Green, Black 78G (F); Black 78G (Stub).

Platignum: Green No. 5 Studio.

Reform: 1745 x 2.

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  On 4/19/2010 at 6:44 PM, monsoonmalabar said:

P. S. I love the use of 'Frankenstein' as a transitive verb! I'm now going to use it at every opportunity.

 

It's Aliiiiiive!

 

  On 4/19/2010 at 11:30 AM, monsoonmalabar said:

I remember reading on here that the tip of the nib is coated with protective layer of wax - it certainly seemed to have something on it which I had to rub off by writing before the ink started to flow. Does anyone know anything about this or what's the proper way to remove the wax?

 

Yes you got that right when you get these you must clean them before you fill them with ink. I just soak mine in water for a few hours and it seems to work. If you need to be more aggressive you can add a drop of dish soap to a glass of water and flush the pen with that (then clean water), or soak in a 10:1 water / ammonia solution for a while.

"If we faked going to the Moon, why did we fake it nine times?" -- Apollo 16 astronaut Charlie Duke

 

http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4009/4447835438_d7314170bf_o.png

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very nice and honest review of the 1745. thanx.

 

mine was the scratchiest thing you ever saw. but after some tweaking and amoothing it is now a decent writer.

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Good review!. These pens are really worth trying, incredible value for the money. I agree that they are made for long writing sessions and with your remark that may be thin for big hands. Every student should have one, big ink capacity plus a vintage nib that is a pleasure to use. Nice pics, thanks for making the review.

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Great review. I had problems with my Reform as well, it was scratchy and didn't have a good ink flow. After several flushes and nib adjustments it now writes nice and wet. I love it!

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  • 2 weeks later...

Thank you.

 

I have an even thinner P-120...but I don't have a mike to measure it. But holding it with a P-75, they are the same width.

 

It was NOS and was sort of old, so I had to run it across a brown paper bag two or three times for 15 or so seconds to get rid of the oxidation.

 

It has just a touch of flex in a M. Ie it is not a nail.Not- semi flex or any thing like that, but a good nib in a "cheap" pen. Good thing I like that kid.

 

I needed a pen to sent to the Philippines, to my god child. As a school pen it would be just fine with the hooded nib. Suddenly I was looking at it, first time in my rotation, and :eureka:.

 

It is a very well made inexpensive pen. It is not a cheap pen, there being a difference in quality.

 

I'll have to see about getting at least his initials monogrammed into it. Good School pens make Bolt look slow, at the speed good ones walk.

 

Seeing I don't pinch this pen but write fore finger up, it's a very good thing I like that kid.

 

When he turns 12 an Esterbrook....how mean of me to hook an innocent kid, like this. :ph34r:

Edited by Bo Bo Olson

The Reality Show is a riveting result of 23% being illiterate, and 60% reading at a 6th grade or lower level.

      Banker's bonuses caused all the inch problems, Metric cures.

Ransom Bucket cost me many of my pictures taken by a poor camera that was finally tossed. Luckily, the Chicken Scratch pictures also vanished.

The cheapest lessons are from those who learned expensive lessons. Ignorance is best for learning expensive lessons.

 

 

 

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I like to have some pens that are reliable, inexpensive, and not overly large to use outside of the house. The Reform 1745 is an ideal pen for that purpose. I purchased two of them from an FPN member that was selling a bunch of them about a year ago. No problems with them at all. They actually write better than a couple of pens I have that cost fifty times more.

 

Another good pen in the same category is the Lanbitou 866. Of the two, I prefer the Reform 1745 due to the very reliable internal piston feed. But the Lanbitou comes with a converter and is easy to find on Ebay. I think I snagged my last one for under $2 with free shipping. I did a review of the Lanbitou 866 about a year ago. The link is below. Since then I've given some away and purchased a few more.

 

https://www.fountainpennetwork.com/forum/index.php?/topic/115719-lanbitou-866/page__p__1148413__hl__lanbitou__fromsearch__1entry1148413

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I knew I should have picked up one of these a couple a years ago when they were plentiful. :headsmack:

Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?

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  • 2 months later...

I bought first the P-120, @ € 5 on German Ebay, last year. In that I can't remove the nib, I sucked up some 50-50 glycerine's and water. I let it sit nib up, over night.

A minute on the brown paper bag...and it was fine....still is fine. Was a Fine nib.

 

This year, a couple of months ago, I got a double pack of 1745 for € 3. And a P-125, which I expected to be larger. It was larger than the 1745s, it was the same size as the P-120. It was expensive € 10.

 

The 1745s were twist out nibs, the P-125 a friction feed.

In both cases, I removed the nib and feed and put in some silicon grease on the edge of piston. Then I brown paper bagged each for less than a minutes in 15 second, circle left, right, up and down, sideways and figure 8s..

 

On the P-125 I got an normal flex EF and on the Reform 1745, I got a Fine and a Semi-flex fine. That was pure luck of the draw.

 

I had absolutely no problems with my Reform pens which were not tweaked, but as is.

I do not consider a pen that has sat a long time as NOS, that it has to have Glycerin or silicon put in the piston chamber or that it needed some brown paper bag, to remove some micro-corrosion on a long setting nib, a problem.

 

It is only a problem if one might not know what to do.

Due to some nice poster, I did know what to do.

Edited by Bo Bo Olson

The Reality Show is a riveting result of 23% being illiterate, and 60% reading at a 6th grade or lower level.

      Banker's bonuses caused all the inch problems, Metric cures.

Ransom Bucket cost me many of my pictures taken by a poor camera that was finally tossed. Luckily, the Chicken Scratch pictures also vanished.

The cheapest lessons are from those who learned expensive lessons. Ignorance is best for learning expensive lessons.

 

 

 

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      Hello all - New here. My Art studies have spilled me into the ft pen world where I am happily submerged and floating! I'm looking to repair some cheap pens that are starving for ink yet filled, and eventually get new nibs; and development of repair skills (an even longer learning curve than my art studies - lol). Every hobby needs a hobby, eh ...
    • The_Beginner 18 Sept 23:35
      horse notebooks if you search the title should still appear though it wont show you in your proflie
    • Jayme Brener 16 Sept 22:21
      Hi, guys. I wonder if somebody knows who manufactured the Coro fountain pens.
    • TheHorseNotebooks 16 Sept 13:11
      Hello, it's been ages for me since I was here last time. I had a post (http://www.fountainpennetwork...-notebooks/?view=getnewpost) but I see that it is no longer accessible. Is there anyway to retrieve that one?
    • Refujio Rodriguez 16 Sept 5:39
      I have a match stick simplomatic with a weidlich nib. Does anyone know anything about this pen?
    • The_Beginner 15 Sept 16:11
      dusty yes, glen welcome
    • Glens pens 11 Sept 1:22
      Hello, Im new to FPN I'm so happy to find other foutain penattics. collecting almost one year ,thought I would say hello to everyone.
    • DustyBin 8 Sept 14:34
      I haven't been here for ages... do I take it that private sales are no longer allowed? Also used to be a great place to sell and buy some great pens
    • Sailor Kenshin 1 Sept 12:37
      Lol…
    • JungleJim 1 Sept 1:55
      Perhaps it's like saying Beetlejuice 3 times to get that person to appear, though with @Sailor Kenshin you only have to say it twice?
    • Sailor Kenshin 31 Aug 21:06
      ?
    • Duffy 29 Aug 19:31
      @Sailor Kenshin @Sailor Kenshin
    • Seney724 26 Aug 22:07
    • Diablo 26 Aug 22:05
      Thank you so much, Seney724. I really appreciate your help!
    • Seney724 26 Aug 21:43
      I have no ties or relationship. Just a very happy customer. He is a very experienced Montblanc expert.
    • Seney724 26 Aug 21:42
      I strongly recommend Kirk Speer at https://www.penrealm.com/
    • Diablo 26 Aug 21:35
      @Seney724. The pen was recently disassembled and cleaned, but the nib and feed were not properly inserted into the holder. I'm in Maryland.
    • Diablo 26 Aug 21:32
      @Seney724. The nib section needs to be adjusted properly.
    • Seney724 26 Aug 18:16
      @Diablo. Where are you? What does it need?
    • Diablo 26 Aug 16:58
      Seeking EXPERIENCED, REPUTABLE service/repair for my 149. PLEASE help!!!
    • Penguincollector 19 Aug 19:42
      @Marta Val, reach out to @terim, who runs Peyton Street Pens and is very knowledgeable about Sheaffer pens
    • Marta Val 19 Aug 14:35
      Hello, could someone recommend a reliable venue: on line or brick and mortar in Fairfax, VA or Long Island, NY to purchase the soft parts and a converter to restore my dad's Sheaffer Legacy? please. Thanks a mill.
    • The_Beginner 18 Aug 2:49
      is there a guy who we can message to find a part for us with a given timelimit if so please let me know his name!
    • virtuoso 16 Aug 15:15
      what happene to the new Shaeffer inks?
    • Scribs 14 Aug 17:09
      fatehbajwa, in Writing Instruments, "Fountain Pens + Dip Pens First Stop" ?
    • fatehbajwa 14 Aug 12:17
      Back to FPN after 14 years. First thing I noticed is that I could not see a FS forum. What has changed? 🤔
    • Kika 5 Aug 10:22
      Are there any fountain pen collectors in Qatar?
    • T.D. Rabbit 31 July 18:58
      Ahh okay, thanks!
    • Scribs 29 July 18:51
      @ TDRabbit, even better would be in Creative Expressions area, subform The Write Stuff
    • T.D. Rabbit 29 July 11:40
      Okay, thanks!
    • JungleJim 29 July 0:46
      @T.D. Rabbit Try posting it in the "Chatter Forum". You have to be logged in to see it.
    • T.D. Rabbit 28 July 17:54
      Hello! Is there a thread anywhere 'round here where one can post self-composed poetry? If not, would it be alright if I made one? I searched on google, but to no avail...
    • OldFatDog 26 July 19:41
      I have several Parker Roller Ball & Fiber Tip refills in the original packaging. Where and how do I sell them? The couple that I've opened the ink still flowed when put to paper. Also if a pen would take the foller ball refill then it should take the fiber tip as well? Anyway it's been awhile and I'm want to take my message collection beyond the few pieces that I have... Meaning I don't have a Parker these refills will fit in 🙄
    • RegDiggins 23 July 12:40
      Recently was lucky enough to buy a pristine example of the CF crocodile ball with the gold plating. Then of course I faced the same problem we all have over the years ,of trying to find e refill. Fortunately I discovered one here in the U.K. I wonder if there are other sources which exist in other countries, by the way they were not cheap pen
    • The_Beginner 20 July 20:35
      Hows it going guys i have a code from pen chalet that i wont use for 10% off and it ends aug 31st RC10AUG its 10% off have at it fellas
    • T.D. Rabbit 19 July 9:33
      Somewhat confusing and off-putting ones, as said to me by my very honest friends. I don't have an X account though :<
    • piano 19 July 8:41
      @The Devil Rabbit what kind of? Let’s go to X (twitter) with #inkdoodle #inkdoodleFP
    • Mort639 17 July 1:03
      I have a Conway Stewart Trafalgar set. It was previously owned by actor Russell Crowe and includes a letter from him. Can anyone help me with assessing its value?
    • Sailor Kenshin 15 July 17:41
      There must be a couple of places here to share artworks.
    • T.D. Rabbit 15 July 12:45
      Hullo! I really like making ink doodles, and I'd like to share a few. Anywhere on the site I can do so? Thanks in advance!
    • Sailor Kenshin 6 July 17:58
      Pay It Forward.
    • AndWhoDisguisedAs 6 July 16:59
      where would I post wanting to trade bottle of ink straight up?
    • JungleJim 3 July 16:14
      @Bill Wood-- just look at the message below you that was posted by @PAKMAN. He is a moderator here on the forums.
    • Bill Wood 2 July 14:24
      Just checking on a classified section and where we are with that. Many thanks. Bill
    • PAKMAN 29 June 1:57
      @inky1 The software for the classified stopped working with the forum. So no we don't have a sales section anymore at FPN
    • inky1 28 June 16:49
      I am not sure which is the classifieds section
    • inky1 28 June 16:46
      IIs there a Fountain Pen Sales board anywhere on here?
    • dave c 25 June 19:01
      Hi. Anybody ever heard about a Royal Puck Pen. Very small but good looking.
    • Eppie_Matts 23 June 19:25
      Thanks! I've just ordered some #6's to experiment with.
    • Al-fresco 21 June 12:11
      @Eppie_Matts Shouldn't be a problem - I've just put a Bock #6 Titanium into a La Grande Bellezza section. Went straight in without any problem.
    • Curiousone11 21 June 4:35
      Any recommendations on anyone who specializes in original pen patents?
    • Eppie_Matts 20 June 1:32
      Hi all - I'm new to experimenting with pens and nibs. Can I put a bock 6 on a Pineider? Thanks!
    • penned in 16 June 17:33
      Hi, I'm new to this forum and was wondering where is the best place to sell a Montblanc ballpoint pen? Are ballpoints allowed here? It's a beautiful pen that deserves a great listing. Thanks.
    • ChrisUrbane 9 June 3:16
      I havent logged in here for a while. I have moved and when I try to change my location on my profile, when I go to save it, it sais 'page not found' and that I do not have authority to change that.
    • Dlj 6 June 20:19
      I am looking for someone who can repair a Waterman Preface ballpoint that won’t stay together
    • Penguincollector 30 May 14:59
      I just noticed that the oppsing team of the game I watched last night had a player named Biro in their lineup. He must be part of Marsell the oily magician’s cadre
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