Pelikan 4001 Blue Black Ink–Banned for Good Reasons

Pelikan 4001 Blue Black ink is so bad I’m actually kind of hoping I somehow got a fake bottle of it.

The ink comes with a certain mystique as it has been banned in the USA for reasons involving a Chemical That Is Never Named (probably not its real name). For this reason everyone interested in fountain pens and blue black ink is trying to get a bottle. I’ve also read reviews praising it on many websites and thought I’d give it a try.

The box and the bottle. Neither can be trusted.

The box and the bottle. Neither can be trusted.

I started out using it in my aluminum Nexus Minimal with a steel M nib. As part of my pen and ink testing process I usually sit down and write two pages of morning pages. This lets me test the comfort of a pen and the flow and color of the ink on cheap copy paper. Later I try the pen and ink on a higher quality paper.

I was immediately struck by how poorly the ink flowed. It felt dry and it left a grey line that darkened a bit over time but still seemed very pale. I cleaned out the pen and made sure it was completely dry. I shook the bottle to mix the ink and tried inking the Nexus again.

I got the same result.

I thought it might be the nib, which needed to be adjusted, and decided to try it in a different pen. The next day inked up my Levenger Sunset, which is one of the juiciest pens I own.

The line was slightly darker but not much. Even with the gold nib on the Sunset I felt as if I was writing with a dying ballpoint pen. I had to resist the urge to press harder to make the ink flow and to refrain from breathing on the end to help the ink flow. In the way some inks change color as they dry and age, the ink does eventually darken but it never has that satisfying color from the label and that many reviews praise.

A sample on Tomoe River paper. You can see how pale it is.

A sample on Tomoe River paper. You can see how pale it is.

In the end, Pelikan 4001 Blue Black is a good example of what fountain pen types call a “dry ink”. It’s helpful when you’re confronted with the question “What do you mean that ink is dry?” (As if any normal person would ever ask that question.)

I left the ink in until the converter was used up and it’s officially been banned from my pen and rotation. Now I just have to find a place to store the bottle until I finally decide to throw it out or give it away.

 

4 thoughts on “Pelikan 4001 Blue Black Ink–Banned for Good Reasons

  1. Mike Taglieri

    I just tried it a few days ago and love it. Do you want to sell yours? Get in touch with me. BTW, it’s not totally discontinued, because Cross blue-black cartridges use it (at least for the time being) but I want to use it on my bottle-fill pens also.

    Reply
  2. Derek

    Great cranky review. I ordered a bottle from the UK to tone down my very wet Pelikan nibs but even Pelikan pens perform badly with it!

    Reply
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  4. WRC

    My Lamy 2000 pen (fine nib) was working fine with Noodler’s Bay State.
    Then I had it soaked and filled with 4001 Blue black. I ran into a serious flow problem shortly after.
    I flushed all out. Then, I switched to a ‘boy-scout’ Pelikan 4001 black and the pen has got back to normal.
    Scared to use in another pen.

    Reply

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