Public Service Announcement - Do Not Buy Torr Pens

I'm not a person who stirs the pot for no good reason, but when people I know and products I love are involved I feel the story should be shared.

The Pen Type-A was the darling of Kickstarter in the summer of 2011. The pen design and highly engineered body and sleeve caught the eye of over 4000 backers, myself included. I was fortunate enough to talk with Che-Wei Wang right when the product launched, and continued to talk with him and his CW&T partner Taylor Levy throughout the campaign as I tried to help source Pilot Hi-Tec-C refills during my time at JetPens.

While the project was a success from a pure numbers standpoint, CW&T ran into huge difficulties in getting the products manufactured. Che-Wei and Taylor were very upfront every step of the way, openly talking about all of the challenges they faced during production. Their Kickstarter updates page reads like a novel (and is highly recommended reading for those into manufacturing). There were ups, downs, and huge delays but in the end all the pens met CW&T's high standards and shipped out.

Unfortunately, the story did not end there.

Allen Arseneau was brought into the fold by CW&T to help sort out the manufacturing issues they were having in China. He and his wife Diana Hudak were part of the inner circle at CW&T, even appearing in photos in CW&T's shop helping to clean and organize the Pen Type-A pens prior to shipping.

As the Kickstarter project was coming to a close and nearly all of the Pen Type-A pens had shipped an interesting thing happened. An eerily similar pen, called the Torr Classic, appeared on the shopping site Fab.com. The man behind the pen? Allen Arseneau.

At that point, things got crazy. NOTCOT has done an awesome job of sorting out the details and connecting the dots so please read their article. Allen is falling back on the fact that the original Pen Type-A design came from an old medical device design and he is doing nothing wrong by manufacturing a similar pen. But when you are part of the inner circle of a product team, have the design plans, and then come out with the same product on your own under a different name? That's just plain wrong.

While I will not say Allen Arseneau is a thief, what he has done is about as unethical as you can get. And playing it off like you are a sweet little angel, well that is just priceless. Posting fake comments on FPN just adds to the hilarity.

The reason I am bringing this up now is that one of my Twitter friends pointed out that they saw Torr Pens for sale at this weekend's Philadelphia Pen Show. Now that pen show season is in full swing I wanted to call attention to this product and ask you a favor: Please do not buy a Torr Pen and support unethical businessmen like Allen Arseneau.

Posted on January 14, 2013 .

Ink Links

The Pen Addict is excited be hosting the February Carnival of Pen, Pencil, and Paper. To make a submission to the Carnival follow this link and fill out the submission form. Thank you for your participation!

-- De Atrementis Steel Blue (Inkdependence!)

-- Waterman Hemisphere (Informal Scribble)

-- Pens and Pencils (sammaritan12)

-- Sloane Crosley's Yearly Date With the Planner (Notebook Stories)

-- Field Notes Expedition: Extreme Memo Books (JetPens Blog)

-- Family Portrait (V) (Cronicas Estilograficas)

-- Pilot Razor Point II (Economy Pens)

-- Zebra Dual Tip Permanent Marker meets its cousins (The Well-Appointed Desk)

-- The Evernote Smart Moleskine (Leigh Reyes)

-- Pen Shows: The Philadelphia 2013 Pen Show Wishlist! (Anderson Pens)

-- Follow the Leaders: Faber-Castell e-motion Fountain Pen (From the Pen Cup)

-- Review: Doane Paper (Fountain Pen Quest)

-- Pen Porn: Pilot Vanishing Point Fountain Pen (MacSparky)

-- An Afternoon with Tsuchihashi san (Scription)

-- Clairefontaine Crok Book Plain Notebook (The Well-Appointed Desk)

-- Pilot Iroshizuku: Kon-Peki (Ed Jelley)

-- Edison Pearl Bulb Filler Review (Inktronics)

-- What's In My Pencase (Scription)

Posted on January 12, 2013 and filed under Links.

Pilot Acroball 2013 US Version

Pilot Acroball

A few weeks back I was discussing the results of my Field Notes Expedition Edition ink testing on Twitter. The conversation covered the pens that were working well, and of course, the ones that were not. I didn't test every pen at my disposal but tested at least one sample of most ink types. I mentioned that hybrid ballpoint inks worked the best, and that caught the eye of @PilotPenUSA, who touted the Pilot Acroball as a great fit.

Being the fan of the Acroball that I am I inquired if that meant it would finally be making its way to the US. The answer was yes, and soon - March of this year to be exact. They also offered to send me some samples, which you see pictured above.

Fortunately for the US market Pliot decided to keep the barrel design and grip used in the original Japanese model. I am a fan of both, and wish some of these elements would find their way into the old and stale Pilot G2 design. The white barrel/pastel accent color scheme leaves a little to be desired (all are black ink) but at least they are offering the 0.7 mm tip. The black barrels you see in the pic are marked with an "M" on the clip as opposed to the 1.0 mm which they are. I'm not sure why that isn't consistent across the product line.

Regardless, this is a great pen that hopefully more people will have access to in a couple of months. I highly recommend it and thanks to Pilot Pen for providing me with these samples.

Here are a few of my previous Pilot Acroball reviews if you want to read why I enjoy this pen so much:

Pilot Acroball 0.7 mm Blue

Pilot Acroball 0.5 mm Blue

Pilot Acroball 3 Color Multi Pen

(P.S. - I'll pass out if the 0.5 mm or Multi Pen ever make it to the States. Your move Pilot.)

Posted on January 10, 2013 and filed under Pilot, Acroball, Pen Reviews, Hybrid.