Pentel Graphgear 1000 Review
Following our recent launch of UX toolkits, we want to understand from the experts about their choice of tools. This week’s guest post comes from Eddy Hope, a freelance web designer, creator of the Calendex and passionate about all things Journals and Mechanical Pencils.
I have been using Mechanical pencils for a little while now and have discovered that finding the perfect one is rather difficult. In order to be in contention a mech pencil has to meet certain criteria as it’s what I use for my bullet journalling and drawings/sketches. Will the popular pentel graphgear 1000 pass the test?
I came across this particular pencil just from browsing the web, as you do, and came across the Pentel Graphgear 1000 on a number of blog posts featuring ‘My Top Ten Mechanical Pencils’ themed posts. This pencil stood out to me more than the others because of its looks. It’s gorgeous! I looked into it further by watching youtube reviews of this particular item and my desire to own this pencil grew. So I went to amazon and bought one relatively cheaply in comparison to other sites selling the same thing. (I’d post a link but it’s not there for that price anymore)
I had a delivery at work and I knew what it was as I’d been eagerly anticipating this pencil and ripped of the packaging straight away. The pencil looks better than it does online. Aesthetically this is one of the best looking pencils I’ve came across.
The next thing that I noticed is the size and weight of the pentel graphgear 1000. It’s a very heavy and very long pencil. I practised writing with it and it writes very well but the weight, dear me, causes some serious fatigue of the hand after a while. And I’m no weakling but writing or drawing with this pencil for long periods of time gets very uncomfortable. As the pencil is so long and with the unique clip (more on this below) coupled with the whole metal body makes it very top heavy.
It also has a retractable nib, this is a big thing for me. Call me weird but I don’t appreciate being stabbed in the leg or torso by a very sharp point. The nib is excellent, I loved it. You expose the nib simply by pressing down on the graphite release on the top and out pops the nib along with a small amount of the graphite so it’s ready to go in one click. When you’re done with the pencil you press the back-end of the clip which releases the nib mechanism with a very satisfying firm thud back inside the pencil. Despite other reviews I never experienced any ‘give’ in the point or nib, it is a very solid and sturdy point with no movement.
The one thing I didn’t like about the nib is once it’s out to begin writing, the distance from grip to the paper is quite considerable. Personally I like to have my hand quite far down a pencil and I can’t do that with this one. That’s just me though, a lot of people have no issues.
The clip, is beautiful, definitely the most eye-catching feature on the pencil. It is solid and grips to pretty much anything you attach it to. Also as stated above it doubles up as the ‘retractable’ portion of the nib mechanism.
It comes with a rubber which is just standard on most mech pencils, I very rarely use rubbers so mine remained very much unused but performed well when tested. Removing the rubber is also the way you add more graphite.
The Grip, looks great but I didn’t like it. It has little rubber bubbles above the point to aid grip but I found it slippery. Maybe I just have sweaty hands :-s but it’s just not usable for long periods. For me.
The Pentel Graghgear 1000 comes in a variety of sizes: 0.3mm, 0.5mm, 0.7mm and 0.9mm leads. I use 0.5mm so the leads are still thin enough to do very fine details but aren’t thin enough to snap when pressure is applied.
Price, this pencil is ridiculously priced on some websites I’ve came across coming in at almost £50 on some. But you can get this pencil for between £10-£20. This is way more than I’m comfortable with spending on a pencil when there’s much cheaper, very capable alternatives. You can get it here from Cult Pens for around £12.
To conclude, the Pentel Graphgear 1000 is a brilliant, solid, well made pencil that will suit many people, just not me unfortunately. I wanted so much to love this pencil but it just wasn’t meant to be.