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You won't regret that.Info only; P51 inbound, watch this space.![]()
Well here she is a NOS Parker 51 Made In England, with chalk marks, instructions, full case and cardboard sleeve. Paid a little more than what I was wanting to but ''yearned'' for a NOS ''51'', it won't replace my '58 Aerometric (black/gold). I still can't decide whether a Midnight Blue or Teal Blue?? Darn eyes![]()
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Very nice indeed! Congrats.Well here she is a NOS Parker 51 Made In England, with chalk marks, instructions, full case and cardboard sleeve. Paid a little more than what I was wanting to but ''yearned'' for a NOS ''51'', it won't replace my '58 Aerometric (black/gold). I still can't decide whether a Midnight Blue or Teal Blue?? Darn eyes![]()
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Genuinely asking, what do you all use them for?
That is a gorgeous little Sheaffer, all understated elegance.
my preferred B or BB stubs were harder to find than F. Maybe because they're more demanding on the feed, it can make them tricky...![]()

Purchased this in 1982 from Dymocks in Sydney. I don't remember the price, but it was at the very top of my budget at the time. I settled on it because it had an attractive gold nib, and the body was brass, so I figured it could take a beating. How right I was...
Over the next twenty-odd years, I flogged this pen mercilessly. Used it every day. Tossed it in a bag with my uni gear, footy boots and god know what else. And depite all that, it never once failed me. Probably one of the best investments I have ever made. She might look a little ragged around the edges now, like me, but every time I take the cap off I'm still a little smitten by that nib.![]()
I had one of these too. Great, hard workers. The inlaid design makes these nibs quite stiff (as are the majority of Sheaffer nibs), but they've always looked pretty. I had a couple of their pens that had this inlaid design in combination with a section incorporating (for some reason) a washer that had lugs biting into the section. This was a bad idea, it introduced weak points that led to cracks in the section, but your pen was one of the better iterations.
Purchased this in 1982 from Dymocks in Sydney. I don't remember the price, but it was at the very top of my budget at the time. I settled on it because it had an attractive gold nib, and the body was brass, so I figured it could take a beating. How right I was...
Over the next twenty-odd years, I flogged this pen mercilessly. Used it every day. Tossed it in a bag with my uni gear, footy boots and god know what else. And depite all that, it never once failed me. Probably one of the best investments I have ever made. She might look a little ragged around the edges now, like me, but every time I take the cap off I'm still a little smitten by that nib.![]()
The inlaid design makes these nibs quite stiff (as are the majority of Sheaffer nibs), but they've always looked pretty.