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Product Description
Equipped with removable stylus tips, the Levenger L-Tech 3.0 fountain pen lets you go from paper to tablet with ease. The solid brass body has a satisfying heft, offering extra protection and more weight in the hand Read More
This pen feels nice, is very well built and finished. It works as advertised. Yet arguably the most important thing, the nib is disappointing: it feels scratchy and that pretty much concludes the review. I'd go for a Lamy Safari instead.
This is, at best, a good fountain pen with some convenience features tacked on.
That said, it's an amazingly solid pen, and well worth the price I paid for it here. I even ended up buying another one for a good friend.
I was so excited about this pen when reading about it, that I was super bummed when the things that made me want to return it were stupid, easily fixable things. Mainly the stylus part suuuuucks.. both of them are worse than they should be, but the silicone is total garbage. Hardly works and when it (randomly) does you have to press hard. The mesh is a little more consistent, but you still have to press way too hard for it to work than is at all convenient and useable.. Especially when using an iPad with a notebook and having to quickly switch back and forth between the two. OH! And the other stupid thing is when you “attempt” to use the stylus on a tablet and then go to make a note in your notebook guess what!... The ink drains back into the barrel and you have choppy writing for the first few words... ugh.
With a good stylus this would probably be dope with a rollerball pen. For a fountain pen, nun-uh.
I have a problem, I collect pens, more than I possible could ever use, but there is just something about a fountain pen that is timeless and enjoyable to write with. When I look at my collection and think about the ones I use the most it is the ones that are "substantial" in it's heft, yet balanced when using so it feels seamless in the hand. This pen fits that bill. Just a pleasure to use, smooth nib and built like a tank so it isn't to "fragile" that one can't use on a daily basis.
Possibly the worst pen I have owned.
Loved the black finish and hefty build but the paint started coming off the nib within a few weeks. Now the paint is coming off the barrel and cap.
The inkflow is very high, even with a fine nib, and the ink barrel frequently comes away from the nib section with a resulting ink spill. Also, the nib often becomes loose and requires tightening on a regular basis.
My recommendation, don't bother. I have gone back to my tried and trusted TWSBI.
My favorite pen! I had one that I lost and I was so desperate to wait for another drop! The stealth model is the most beautiful matte black pen I've seen. Superbly designed barrel (heptagonal) and cap (6/7 turn to open, feels pretty tight but really pleasantly smooth). The knurling makes an excellent grip (or if you'd like to grip more behind, the step/threads doesn't hurt either, and post the cap). The stylus caps are really reliable, especially I like the mesh fabric one, especially doing signatures on touchscreen cashiers. An utter pleasure to write with, sure it might need a bit of a break-in, you can just carefully stretch it a bit by pressing down the nib dry on paper.
Some critiques, the case only fits the pen with the normal flat cap. So since now I fear losing my pen again I carry it in my case, I cut a bit of the foam so it can fit with the stylus cap top on. Also the black nib. I like the nib design, consistent with the whole minimalistic design, but apparently they use lesser quality paint, so it flakes because of heat, be careful when cleaning the nib. I have a black nib from Goulet Pens and Monteverde.