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Reviewbucket.co.uk scanned the internet for Rollerball - STABILO beCrazy! FRUITS Strawberry reviews.
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For Rollerball - STABILO beCrazy! FRUITS Strawberry, 54 customer reviews collected from 1 e-commerce sites, and the average score is 4.3.

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28.5.2017

The "STABILO beCrazy! Rollerball Pen with 3 Blue Ink Cartridge - Strawberry" is part of the inexpensive beYou! series of child-friendly writing implements that includes fountain pens in the same bright colours; there are a few different colour options, all of which have fruity themes. Both types of pen share the same general design and features and the same universal ink cartridges. One could own both types and only need a single supply of cartridges.The pen uses a soft-touch, textured grip to aid users. There is a pocket clip on the cap but, as with the rest of the body, it is plastic and needs to be used gently, if at all. The beCrazy rollerball could be a precursor to using a fountain pen,a natural progression from a pencil as writing experience and abilities improve. A basic pen case could hold a couple of pens, an eraser and a pencil sharpener with space for a pack of cartridges. Supplied with 3 cartridges, one is within the barrel but not installed; it isn't fully usable until that is done. Once installed, there is space for another within the barrel if placed back-to-back.Stabilo currently have at least two ranges of 'school' writing implements. The colourful designs of beCrazy will be attractive to under-10s while the slightly more expensive beFab series of fountain pens are of plain design and directed more towards older ones. The user may initially need to be shown how to change the cartridge when required; it is simple as the barrel unscrews and they only need to be gently pushed in to engage.Offers excellent value and, as a refillable, it is one that could last for years.
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11.4.2017

That little bit different, this is a colourful ROLLERBALL PEN, from Stabilo®, which uses ink cartridges like a fountain pen and writes smoothly & effortlessly, in my experience.? STABILO 'beYou! beCrazy!'? ROLLERBALL PEN (with 3 SHORT INK CARTRIDGES + 1 blank)? MEDIUM/0.5 mm? REF: B-50415-5? INK COLOUR : BLUE (Erasable with an ink eraser ~ not supplied)~ DESIGN : ‘MELON’~ COLOUR : WATERMELON PINK/PEACH, dotted with with BLACK ‘pips’. ‘Stabilo® beCrazy!’ is in WHITE lettering on GREEN, the latter matching the functional shirt clip & both ends of the pen.‘Made in Germany’The set arrives in a blister pack measuring around 19 cm x 7 cm.Measuring around 13.5 cm with the top in situ, the plastic-type,round-barrelled pen is chunky in hand but lightweight and around 1 cm wide for the best part, not allowing for the functional shirt clip. The cap is around 5.25 cm long, allowing for the ‘pointy’ end and pulls off relatively easily, requiring a fairly sharp push to click back into place.The ‘soft zone’, under the cap, is slimmer & lightly textured, in a BLACK non-slip material.The barrel unscrews.A blank cartridge is inside the barrel along with one short ink cartridge, which need repositioning for first use.Once in place, with the barrel screwed tightly back on to pierce the cartridge, the ink flowed through to the rollerball straight away and has started each time ever since, without hesitation.The line width is MEDIUM/0.5 mm.Also available in
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17.2.2019

I already use fountain and cartridge pens at home and like the environmentally friendliness of such pens over disposable biros. The problem is I can’t use such pens at work because I have to use carbon copy forms which require one to press down on the pen.What I needed was a re-usable biro. I found this pen on Amazon - despite searching physical stationary shops firsr. It wasn’t the most expensive offering so I wasn’t expecting much but as a test pen I figured if it showed promise I could buy a more expensive one.My main worry is that if I didn’t use it for a week or so that like a cartridge fountain pen it would dry out and being a biro it could be hard to get going.I am really impressed with this pen.It writes very nicely with an ink trail that cartridge pen users would recognise and when I did the leave it to dry out (with the lid on as a fair experiment) I found that after a week on its side without any use did not dry it out - worked straight away.The only thing I would say is that because the ink is waterbased instead of oil based as in disposables, the pen sometimes feels a tiny bit rough at the ball point. It’s not a deal breaker and barely noticeable.If you care about the environment - this pen is a good place to start.
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11.4.2017

This is a nice pen priced at £5.99 as at 11th April 2017. I have used it for ten days now and took extensive notes at a meeting where the ink flowed smoothly and freely throughout the note taking. It is a rollerball pen and like all roller ball pens, does not bleed or blot. So what makes it different? Well it may be a standard roller ball pen, but you refill it using standard ink cartridges; it comes supplied with three blue cartridges.I have given it 4 stars rather than 3 or 5. Firstly may I say that I do like it, I am not so keen on the artwork, but that is a matter of taste; what has resulted in the removal of a star is that whilst the materials for the pen are ok, they are just ok,then there is price, at £5.99 it is not that much cheaper than a Rosewood roller ball pen, if you want something that looks good, or for better value, I sourced a set of three roller ball pens for £12.00, which looked like fountain pens.In summary, without the use of the choice to use standard ink cartridges (and a range of colours) this would have been a three star item, however, providing that I don't lose it first, I could see me using this pen for many years and therefore the cartridge re-fill option could provide me with a cheap pen in the long run.
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5.4.2017

I really like this for writing as it acts a bit like a cross between a fountain pen and a ball point. It uses real ink cartridges so you can change ink colours, it comes with 3 blue cartridges.Initially I did not think it was going to write as no ink came out of the ball. On opening the pen there was what looked like an empty ink cartridge plugged into the ball point end. There were two cartridges in the pack so I thought no trouble I will use one of those.I was in the process of doing this when the other cartridge that was hidden in the pen body fell out onto the floor and rolled under a cupboard unit. (recovering it is a different story so be careful when you put the first cartridge in)Fun over I put the cartridge in and the ink flowed and it wrote perfectly,nice even ink flow with most of the advantages of a fountain pen but without getting ink everywhere.This has the medium point of 0.5mm which is just right for me, also the cap clips on securely which is nice.I do not think I would buy it for style and would prefer a plainer version.The problem I found was that the pen was just too light, I prefer a bit of weight in a pen and this was even lighter than those you get in packs of disposable ball point pens.
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1.6.2017

There is a time when you are at school that you are told to move on from using a pencil to using a pen and then again onto a fountain pen. It used to be great having your own fountain pen with those squat ink cartridges that would pop in. Unfortunately, my handwriting proved so poor that I was asked to move on again to a ballpoint as they allow a little more clarity in your penmanship and don’t bleed as badly. The ‘beCrazy Rollerball’ range would have been a great alternative to both as it is a ballpoint that uses ink cartridges.This actually works well as you get the nice flow of the ink, but the steady element of the ballpoint.A child with poor handwriting won’t have to feel like they are left out by not having a fountain pen as this is as similar as they are going to get. There is no doubt that this is a pen designed for children in junior and secondary school. The asking price is very competitive, but does mean that the pens themselves are a little light and on the flimsy side. It is the type of thing a child would be happy to use, but not someone that works in an office. As a school tool the range is fun to look at and good to use.
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21.6.2017

This is effectively a cross between a normal roller ball pen and a fountain pen - a roller ball given the type of the tip and a fountain pen, given the type of cartridge it uses. A normal roller ball pen typically uses a unique type of ink cartridge and these tend to be quite expensive to buy. However, as this pen uses the same type of cartridge which can be found in a fountain pen, this should make refills much cheaper and much more flexible.The pen is comfortable to write with and I was quite surprised at this because it looks exactly like the type of pen which has been designed by an accountant rather than a designer i.e. it looks pretty cheap and not exactly what you would expect from a £6 pen.However, on the upside, the refills are pretty cheap and so this should offset the initial outlay to some extent.The pen which I received was in the design named strawberry (not sure I know of any strawberries which have yellow and white stripes though) and it also comes in melon and pineapple designs. The designs do make the pen a bit more quirky and interesting and hopefully a bit less likely that it will "disappear."
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29.4.2017

This is an unusual pen - I wasn't quite sure what to expect. It takes me back to my school days when "neat work" had to be done with a fountain pen. However this doesn't have the horrible scratchiness that fountain pens have when you're writing. The pen is easy to use and the ink flows smoothly. The lid clips on tight to stop the pen drying out so it keeps working even if you leave it unused for a while. It is very reasonably priced for a pen that you can keep using and refilling. It comes with 3 cartridges of ink (one cunningly hidden inside the pen) so it will keep going for a while. The fact that you can keep a spare cartridge in the pen is useful so you don't run out.And of course being a cartridge pen means you can change the colour if you fancy writing in black or red (or whatever!). It uses standard cartridges so getting replacements is straightforward. The style is fun and fresh which I like.
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16.4.2017

The pen has a girly look to it and is comfortable to write with - the part that you grip is rubbery with tiny grooves. It produces averagely thick, mid blue writing.It has three cartridges, which are easy to click onto the inner spike with no mess. If you haven't used a cartridge pen before, you need to unscrew it, remove the blank cartridge ( it's in there to prevent the full cartridge from being accidentally pierced), then press the thin end of the full cartridge firmly into the inside of the nib half of the pen until it clicks. Then screw the other end back on. It is easy to lose the cartridges, so I keep them in the original packaging.It's a nice pen, and will last well if you don't lose the spare cartridges.I couldn't find any info on which replacement cartridges to buy after you use these three, but they look like standard cartridges to me.
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21.5.2017

A rollerball pen.In the pack, once torn open, you will find the pen with an empty ink cartridge in it. Two other full blue cartridges. Plus the pen cap.Unscrew the body of the pen, remove the empty cartridge. Then pierce the front of one of the spare ones. And it will slot into the pen easily.Seal up again and you can write. Or put the cap on when you don't want to use it.All of the pen is plastic. The end of it has a good solid grip, designed to be something you can use whether left or right handed. It really is a good comfortable grip. And that makes it a pen that is very easy to write with. It writes smoothly as well.For those of us who don't have great handwriting,that is very useful.So this is a pretty good and useful product.
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24.7.2017

A nice lightweight rollerball pen with non-slip grip zone, which is ideal for both right or left handers (I'm right handed and my daughter who is left handed tried it also). Felt like using a fountain pen for the ink flow but without any of the mess that comes when you're left handed using a fountain pen. The beCrazy! range are bright and attractive and perhaps well suited to youngsters who want a more grown up feel from their pens. As there are spare cartridges included I didn't feel it was too costly. Bearing in mind I feel that this is suited to children perhaps offering black, which is the colour for all exam papers, would be a good idea.I really liked this pen myself and didn't feel silly having a strawberry design pen in my handbag.
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6.6.2017

Great pen in use, just the styling that's a bit odd.It takes super-cheap short ink carts and will also accept Waterman long carts. Haven't tried Parker carts yet.Writes really well as long as you write with the pen at a bit of an angle; it can be scratchy when near the vertical but (for me) that's not a very natural way to hold the pen anyway.Ink doesn't dry out like it does with a cartridge pen with a nib.Minor negatives are that you can't easily flip the lid off with one hand in one action as the rubber finger rest grips it.And that the ends of the pen are fashioned into a point, so clicking the lid back on with your thumb can be a bit uncomfortable.I'd recommend the same pen in mattblack:
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9.6.2017

I have a couple of other pens from this range and like those this is a really nice rollerball, with a lovely low-friction feel. Ideal for 3 hour marathon exams. The sister product fountain pen (equally good) uses the same ink cartridges and the writing I generate with them both is pretty much indistinguishable. With 2 refills thrown in, and the possibility of buying cheap generic refills in bulk on line, it represents fair value. However, if you are in disposable pen mode, at circa £6, this could work out expensive for a single pen. I suspect from the design that these are aimed at younger people, but they are good for work too as you can spot your own pen easily.

21.6.2017

I've not come across a rollerball running off traditional fountain pen cartridges before but it certainly works and offers economic and relatively ecological replacement options including changing the colour should you wish. This pen has Stabilo's usual high manufacture quality, some fun design that appealed to my 9 year old daughter and comes with three cartridges (one in the barrel, two spares). The ink flows nicely and produces a pleasing script - all round success then. The price is a little high for a basic rollerball but over time - provided you don't lose it - there should be a cost saving with the cartridges.

15.5.2017

A cute pen, featuring a water-melon design. More of a fun school-type of pen than a serious for adults type of pen.When you first open it, it won't write because you need to insert an ink cartridge. When you unscrew the barrel , a full ink cartridge drops out and you have to removed the empty dummy cartridge and insert the ink-filled cartridge. This means that you now have space within the bottom end of the barrel to store one of the two spare ink cartridges supplied with the pen. It writes smoothly and evenly, and as a budget 'fun' rollerball pen, it's decent enough but not outstanding enough to get excited about.

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