Wednesday, January 21, 2015

At the Other End of the Sheaffer-Lovers' Club

Back in October, when I posted about this one, I was fairly confident it was Pat Mohan who showed it to me:


It wasn’t. It was Mike Kirk. Pat knew it wasn’t his for two reasons;

To learn more, this full article is included in The Leadhead's Pencil Blog Volume 3, available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble and everywhere else you buy books, or you can order a copy signed by yours truly through the Legendary Lead Company HERE.


5 comments:

John Hubbard said...

Jon, Perhaps Sheaffer could have imprinted these pencils on the barrel since the cap would have been missing from the double-ender configuration.
John H.

Jon Veley said...

Correct, which means the parts were specially made for double-enders (no golf pencils have the imprint in this location).

If the parts were specifically made for double-enders, the design patent included on the imprint is irrelevant to the pencil. Hence the qeustion: was Sheaffer lazy and reusing the wrong imprint, or was there intent to passively claim patent rights that didn't exist?

jonro said...

Sheaffer reused parts on different models whenever it made sense and I don't think there was any disreputable intent on their part. Those double-ended pencils are cool.

Jon Veley said...

Right - but these parts weren't reused. Look how much longer the two ends are than they are on a golf pencil.

viktor.mader@web.de said...

Cool pencils!

Besides, regarding Sheaffer's golf pencil patent: From examining my Sheaffer Balance Combo, I'd bet the pencil-part is identical with the golf pencil.

Viktor