Pentel B-100 Pen Review

Pentel B100

Several months ago, my friend sent me this lovely little oddity. It is the Pentel B-100 Pen. Overall, the pen looks like your standard budget disposable pen. But its not what it appears. The body of all the pens are green (Pantone Color of the Year Emerald, I might add) with the tips indicating the color. Mine is a clear red ink but the pen is also available in black from Kiosk. It wasn’t until I started writing with it that I realized it was quite unusual.

The pen has some line-width variation I would not have expected in a rollerball or fiber-tipped pen. It writes almost like a stub nib fountain pen or a small calligraphy nib. Looking closely at the point I couldn’t quite figure out exactly what it is. My best guess is that it is a rollerball but the translucent plastic casing around the ball is slightly flexible allowing the line to flow a bit differently than a rigid plastic rollerball.

It is not water-proof but water-resistant enough to be used on envelopes or folders. On my testing paper (the Miquelrius grid notebook), I got a little bit of show through on the back side of the page but it was nominal. On good quality paper, this pen could be used on both the front and reverse of the paper without any readability issues.

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Overall, I quite like this pen. It wrote smoothly, offered line variation not often found in a disposable pen and the body is a lovely green, concealing the fun of bright, red ink inside.

Pens are sold individually for $4 each from Kiosk with a wonderful little card with a story about the pen.

Pilot Varsity Fountain Pen

Pilot Varsity Fountain Pen

I noticed that I had never written a review of the Pilot Varsity Fountain Pen so I thought I’d add it. Let me start by saying that I bought this several years ago and was very unhappy with its performance and stuck it in a drawer. It actually took quite some time before I was willing to venture into fountain pens again because of the experience. To be honest, at $3 per pen, I’m not entirely sure what I was expecting.

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To a newbie though, the Varsity seems like a reasonable way to get into fountain pens. Its not. The most expensive part of a good fountain pen is the nib and feed, and this one, available in a medium width only, is not good at all. Its a plain steel nib. Steel nibs can be good but not at $3, I think.

Pilot Varsity Fountain Pen

If you look at the writing sample above, the pen skips and whole letters will not appear while the ink flow readjusts. It squeaks on the paper, actually squeaks. If you have an aversion to the sound of nails on a chalkboard, you best give this pen a wide berth.

I’m not inclined to write reviews for products that I genuinely dislike and think are terrible. I’d prefer to let me silence speak for itself. However, I get enough people asking about the Varsity and other sub-$10 fountain pens that I felt I should be honest.

Over the next few weeks, I’ll put up reviews of the other entry-level priced fountain pens. Maybe there is a gem among them.