12-Pk Pilot Precise V5 Liquid Ink Retractable Rolling Ball Pens (Blue, Extra Fine)
Expired
$11.70
$32.40
+50Deal Score
35,976 Views
Amazon has 12-Pack Pilot Precise V5 RT Liquid Ink Retractable Rolling Ball Pens (Blue, Extra Fine Point) on sale for $11.71. Shipping is free with Prime or on $25+ orders.
Thanks to Community Member celeb for finding this deal.
Walmart also has 12-Pack Pilot Precise V5 RT Liquid Ink Retractable Rolling Ball Pens (Blue, Extra Fine Point) on sale for $11.71. Shipping is free w/ Walmart+ (free 15-day trial) or on $35+ orders.
Editor's Notes & Price Research
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About this deal:
Our research indicates that 12-Pack Pilot Precise V5 RT Liquid Ink Retractable Rolling Ball Pens (Blue, Extra Fine Point) is $9.10 lower (43.7% savings) than the next best available price from a reputable merchant with prices starting from $20.81 at the time of this posting. -StrawMan86
First post in years. Was looking for a deal on my fav pens and came across this which is 64% cheaper than usual. I bought a few boxes to get me through the year. I'm a bit of a pen freak and these write beautifully.
Model: PILOT Precise V5 RT Refillable & Retractable Liquid Ink Rolling Ball Pens, Extra Fine Point (0.5mm) Blue Ink, 12-Pack (26063)
Deal History
Deal History includes data from multiple reputable stores, such as Best Buy, Target, and Walmart. The lowest price among stores for a given day is selected as the "Sale Price".
Sale Price does not include sale prices at Amazon unless a deal was posted by a community member.
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Community Wiki
Last Edited by StrawMan86 | Staff
October 9, 2021
at
02:26 AM
I'm a left-handed writer and while my longstanding choice has been the Uni-ball Jetstream 101 (https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B004A912P4), I remain on the lookout for a good pen that won't smear. After I bought a pack of these during the last deal (for a buck less), I scribbled a test word or two, immediately rubbed the text with my finger and it smeared.
I was a little disappointed, but figured I'd keep one in my pencil/pen cup as a backup. The next time I needed to take notes, I tried it first and realized -- duh -- as I'm actually writing notes, the text I just wrote *is* having time to dry, so it was nowhere near as smear-ey as I initially experienced when I intentionally tried to make it smear.
(FWIW, for away-from-home operations, I like pens with removable caps because that configuration permits a great hack I learned a decade or two back: When someone wants to borrow a pen (like a Sharpie!), I hold on to the cap. If I give them my pen *and* its cap, there's a non-zero chance that my pen will become theirs as memory gets fuzzy on their trip to return it to me. I guess with no cap, there's also a non-zero chance, but I make up that it's far less likely.
I use blue because I am an atty who wants to be clear on what is the original and what is the copy.
Many legal documents require blue ink to differentiate from photocopies.
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Anybody have experience with both these pens and the UniBall 207 Micro? Those are my favorites and run about the same price. Wondering how these compare.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank andymand
10-09-2021 at 04:48 AM.
I'm a left-handed writer and while my longstanding choice has been the Uni-ball Jetstream 101 (https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B004A912P4), I remain on the lookout for a good pen that won't smear. After I bought a pack of these during the last deal (for a buck less), I scribbled a test word or two, immediately rubbed the text with my finger and it smeared.
I was a little disappointed, but figured I'd keep one in my pencil/pen cup as a backup. The next time I needed to take notes, I tried it first and realized -- duh -- as I'm actually writing notes, the text I just wrote *is* having time to dry, so it was nowhere near as smear-ey as I initially experienced when I intentionally tried to make it smear.
(FWIW, for away-from-home operations, I like pens with removable caps because that configuration permits a great hack I learned a decade or two back: When someone wants to borrow a pen (like a Sharpie!), I hold on to the cap. If I give them my pen *and* its cap, there's a non-zero chance that my pen will become theirs as memory gets fuzzy on their trip to return it to me. I guess with no cap, there's also a non-zero chance, but I make up that it's far less likely.
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I was a little disappointed, but figured I'd keep one in my pencil/pen cup as a backup. The next time I needed to take notes, I tried it first and realized -- duh -- as I'm actually writing notes, the text I just wrote *is* having time to dry, so it was nowhere near as smear-ey as I initially experienced when I intentionally tried to make it smear.
(FWIW, for away-from-home operations, I like pens with removable caps because that configuration permits a great hack I learned a decade or two back: When someone wants to borrow a pen (like a Sharpie!), I hold on to the cap. If I give them my pen *and* its cap, there's a non-zero chance that my pen will become theirs as memory gets fuzzy on their trip to return it to me. I guess with no cap, there's also a non-zero chance, but I make up that it's far less likely.
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank DealRajaDeal
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank andymand
I was a little disappointed, but figured I'd keep one in my pencil/pen cup as a backup. The next time I needed to take notes, I tried it first and realized -- duh -- as I'm actually writing notes, the text I just wrote *is* having time to dry, so it was nowhere near as smear-ey as I initially experienced when I intentionally tried to make it smear.
(FWIW, for away-from-home operations, I like pens with removable caps because that configuration permits a great hack I learned a decade or two back: When someone wants to borrow a pen (like a Sharpie!), I hold on to the cap. If I give them my pen *and* its cap, there's a non-zero chance that my pen will become theirs as memory gets fuzzy on their trip to return it to me. I guess with no cap, there's also a non-zero chance, but I make up that it's far less likely.