Guaranteed for Life
on selected models
£156.95
(£130.79 ex vat)
To commemorate the partnership launch, Fisher Space Pen and Blue Origin are releasing three custom-designed Space Pens featuring the distinct feather symbol representing the perfection of flight hardware design, an ideal balance of strength and lightness. The feather is a reminder to reach for the highest skies, just as the Fisher Space Pen beckons you to go anywhere and write everywhere!
One of the three options is the Original Astronaut Space Pen, plated with a stylish, sleek black titanium nitride increasing its resistance to scratches and giving it an intriguing, stealthy appearance. This special edition AG7 includes the Blue Origin Feather symbol wrapped around the pen along with other celestial features.
Key Features
Composition: Brass
Finish: Titanium Nitride plated
Colour: Black
Length: 12.7cm
Diameter: 0.96cm
Cartridge: Fisher pressurised FSPR4 black ink medium point
Packaging: Capsule gift box
Overview
There are few moments in our history where everyone remembers where they were, what they were doing, and who they were with. July 20, 1969, is one of those.
The AG7 was the original Fisher Space Pen that was used on the Apollo 7 space mission in 1968 and has been used on all manned space flights since then. The overall design and construction of this pen have not changed in over 50 years, and the pen you buy today will be the same as the one taken to the moon back in 1969.
A sturdy pen made from solid brass with an extremely hard chrome plating. It has a very positive and substantial feeling click mechanism. You press down on the top to extend the refill and press the side button to retract. Its special design assures you that you will always retract the point before you slide it in your pocket.
Produced in Nevada USA to exacting standards utilising Fisher’s tungsten carbide ballpoint and patented Thixotropic ink in a sealed, pressurised cartridge. Like all Fisher Space Pens, this pen will write in zero-gravity, upside down, underwater, over oil and grease, in -30 to +250 degrees Fahrenheit and three times longer than the average ballpoint pen.









