New here thanks for letting join ! I have a pen that was given to me . I've been told it's a Waterman Man. Can someone confirm what pen I have ? Also curious to if there's any value to the pen ? Should I guard it from the wife and kids lol
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New here thanks for letting join ! I have a pen that was given to me . I've been told it's a Waterman Man. Can someone confirm what pen I have ? Also curious to if there's any value to the pen ? Should I guard it from the wife and kids lol
It's a Waterman Man 200 rollerball. In the UK I've seen one fetch £60 brand new & boxed. Otherwise may fetch £40 used.
Thank you ... It was gift from my Mother to my Father and he gave it to me . So it's not going anywhere just curious to what it was.
The Man 100 and 200 series are very well regarded - really lovely pens. The 200 is a smaller version, the 100 is reasonably hefty.
Look after this little beauty. I'd suggest it might be lonely - if you see a fountain pen wandering around without a soulmate, make up the set!
Agreed this is beauty . Now everyone has called this a roller ball . It's not tho it appears to be felt tip . Is that common or maybe something my Dad switched out ?
Waterman made it as a fountain pen, rollerball, ballpoint and mechanical pencil. I don't know what the refill is that's in there.
I won a Mann 200 in a six pen live auction lot.
There use to be some 13-10 years ago flame wars between Pelikan's change out nib and Waterman's thin nib.
Outside my two 52's it is my only Waterman, and it's F is as thin as my Pelikan 200's EF.
I'm not much into real skinny nibs. So for me I added another EF pen for editing.
However after Japanese pens really came in about a decade ago. After that Pelikan Waterman flame war died, in Japanese nibs are reputed to be even thinner than Waterman.
I really don't know if modern Waterman is fatter than semi-vintage. Pelikan defiantly is.