Share your favorites on Show & Tell

Does anyone know about an Eradopen?

In Pens > Fountain Pens > Show & Tell and Office > Show & Tell.
Recent Activity5 of 75Cross Writing Text (Scarce Paper Used in Full)just a recent addition to my collection of fountain pens
1
Love it
1
Like it

Vynil33rpmVynil33rpm loves this.
officialfuelofficialfuel likes this.
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 14 years ago

    PassingFancy
    (6 items)

    An odd pen I can find no info on. Reads "Cardinell Eradopen Single Fluid The Eradicator"...

    Unsolved Mystery

    Help us close this case. Add your knowledge below.

    logo
    Fountain Pens
    See all
    Vintage - PARKER 51 Clear Lucite Demonstrator Model Fountain Pen
    Vintage - PARKER 51 Clear Lucite De...
    $67
    Waterman 55 CLEAN CARDINAL pen
    Waterman 55 CLEAN CARDINAL pen...
    $265
    Vintage - PARKER 51 Mustard Barrel Fountain Pen with 1/10 16K Gold Filled Cap
    Vintage - PARKER 51 Mustard Barrel ...
    $187
    Vintage Waterman's 55 Ideal 6 Rippled Red/Orange & Black Fountain Pen
    Vintage Waterman's 55 Ideal 6 Rippl...
    $295
    logo
    Vintage - PARKER 51 Clear Lucite Demonstrator Model Fountain Pen
    Vintage - PARKER 51 Clear Lucite De...
    $67
    See all

    Comments

    1. PassingFancy PassingFancy, 14 years ago
      Well, it's a lever filler; not a button filler. The threads at the back have been suggested to be a leftover from a previous incarnation as a button filler; that would jive with your theory. However; threads on these pens are not cast, they are machined on after the body has been machined on a lathe. The name "Eradicator" brings to mind the chemical neutralizers used to erase ink. I thought it may be a two part pen that included a separate system to deliver an ink eradicator. The presence of a "warranted" nib may be a bit of a red herring as those nibs were common replacements on all pens when the original was damaged or the owner sought a different writing quality.
      I expect the script used in the logo to be an indication of a 1920's pen, as is the material which was common well into the '30s. But the clip and lever are both generic, without any logo... it's quite a puzzle yes?
    2. PassingFancy PassingFancy, 14 years ago
      Hmmmm.... good point about the wardens. But the clip is brass w/ a good look of rolled gold, though not marked., as is the lever. The lever hinge is similar to a Mabie Todd in that it uses an internal c-clip as opposed to the Sheaffer pin hinge. Another interesting point is that there is no country of origin on it. I believe it was made law in the early 1900's and all pens I have from the teen's on up (until recently) have country of origin. This is a real puzzle and the folks at FPN haven't enlightened me at all.

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.