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Pelikan 100N


Sallent

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The Pelikan 100N was produced by Pelikan from the mid-1930's all the way until 1951. This pen has become an iconic symbol of vintage German pens.

 

First Impressions: 5/5 pts

 

It is small....very small as a matter of fact, and very light too. However, when posted the pen grows to a very respectable size and is a remarkably well balanced writing instrument.

 

The quality is great. The piston is super smooth, the ink window is a nice touch (mine is loaded here with Waterman Blue) and the Gold nib is impressive.

 

Filling Mechanism: 5/5 pts

 

The pen uses the same reliable and buttery smooth Pelikan piston filler that all Pelikans are known for. Although this is a small pen, it hold a ton of ink. What's not too love about this efficient filling system?

 

Writting performance: 5/5 pts

 

This vintage beauty is sporting a highly flexible fine Gold nib. The nib easily screws out and can be swapped for another in a matter of seconds. :thumbup: The ink flow is nicely wet and consistent, the nib is smooth and very responsive as it glides above paper. A superb performance!!!

 

Quality: 5/5 pts

 

The Pelikan 100N is built like a battle tank. These pens have held up extremely well after more than 5 decades of use. This one is no different. These Pelikans are very well built using high quality materials. I have no doubt that this pen will still be around 50 years from now.

 

Total Score: 20/20 pts

 

And now for some beauty shots from the Queen herself! Please excuse the thumb prints, I have been using the pen all week and a few thumb prints are to be expected here and there :lol:

 

http://i192.photobucket.com/albums/z248/osall001/Pens/100_5383.jpg

 

http://i192.photobucket.com/albums/z248/osall001/Pens/100_5384.jpg

Edited by Dr Ozzie

Ball-point pens are only good for filling out forms on a plane.

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I bought a 100N with a broad stub nib a few months ago, and I agree with the good doctor this pen writes like a champ - even after five or more decades of use - smooth, wet, and reliable.

 

The 100N is the only pen I use posted. Posting makes this diminutive pen longer if not wider.

 

It's easy to see why Pelikan has been a mainstay of the pen market for so many years.

Ray

Atlanta, Georgia

 

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I hear so much about the vintage Pel nibs, but never see any writing samples. Wanna show off the fruits of that flexi fine nib?!

 

Love the vintage birds, especially the bold caps. Thanks for bragging sharing!

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Great pen! Thanks for writing the review, I never realized it's so small. What is the size compared to a Pelikan m200? Could you post a comparison shot?

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Great pen! Thanks for writing the review, I never realized it's so small. What is the size compared to a Pelikan m200? Could you post a comparison shot?

 

No problem :thumbup:

 

The M200 is larger with the cap on, but when posted the 100N is larger than the M200.

 

If you write with the cap unposted, the M200 is just a tad bit bigger, but it's a very small difference. Anyway, here are some pics

 

http://i192.photobucket.com/albums/z248/osall001/M200/100_5408.jpg

http://i192.photobucket.com/albums/z248/osall001/M200/100_5406.jpg

http://i192.photobucket.com/albums/z248/osall001/M200/100_5415.jpg

Ball-point pens are only good for filling out forms on a plane.

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I should also add that the ink window has excellent visibility, but since the pen is full of ink, it looks darker than it would look if it was empty.

 

I hope the size reference pictures were helpful

Ball-point pens are only good for filling out forms on a plane.

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  • 4 weeks later...

Thanks for the review! Do you perhaps have a writing sample of your pen? I'd really like to see how wide the M-nib on this pen writes!

http://img525.imageshack.us/img525/606/letterji9.png fpn_1315221373__inkdroplogofpn.jpg
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  • 8 months later...

I just got mine with a Mike-it-Right nib and am enjoying it now.

http://img244.imageshack.us/img244/5642/postcardde9.pnghttp://img525.imageshack.us/img525/606/letterji9.png
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  • 5 years later...

Still looking for pictures of the later 50's version of this pen. Does the ink window in translucent green extend to the nib section also?

Rob Maguire (Plse call me "M or Mags" like my friends do...)I use a Tablet, Apple Pencil and a fountain pen. Targas, Sailor, MB, Visconti, Aurora, vintage Parkers, all wonderful.

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