Smith and Wesson "Tactical Pen"

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Taylor Cutlery, which holds the license for Smith and Wesson-branded knives and other accessories, has taken on the "tactical pen" market with a line of writing utensils that double as striking implements. The concept is simple enough: Any rigid cylinder roughly the span of your palm can be used with pocket-stick or yawara techniques. This is a proven method for enhancing the power and efficacy of your striking. A wooden or metal pocket stick cannot feel pain, doesn't break as easily as the bones of your hand, and concentrates the force of your strike into a smaller area, thus producing greater trauma.

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Taylor's tactical pen is a 5.7-inch cylinder of CNC-machined 6061 T-6 aluminum. It tapers to a striking tip at the end opposite the pen cap. At its thickest, the pen is half an inch in diameter. Light grooves cover the cap portion, while flutes in the tapered body improve traction a little bit. The body is relatively slippery regardless, but not so slippery as to be unworkable.

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The pocket clip is of steel and is marked with the Smith and Wesson logo. That's probably a liability. This pen won't pass for something ordinary or harmless thanks to its aggressive, fluted styling, but adding the licensed brand of a famous gun manufacturer guarantees that this pen isn't going to get through most security checkpoints (particularly those in Federal buildings and prior to boarding aircraft).

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The pen cap is screwed firmly onto the body and stays in place during day-to-day carry. If you do choose to write something with your Smith and Wesson pen, the cap unscrews but does not really fit on the tapered rear of the pen body. It sort of does, by friction, but it's not going to stay there firmly.

The pen writes well enough, though it's nothing special. It accepts any standard Parker, Hauser, or other compatible Gigant 012 refill. The writing tip unscrews from the tapered barrel to provide access to the ink cartridge.

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This pen is solid enough, heavy enough, and of the proper length to do some real damage when used as a pocket stick. The tapered point accentuates that potential. Unfortunately, however, it looks like nothing so much as a standard aluminum yawara into which a pen has been inserted. If the purpose of a "tactical pen" is to look like a pen and not a weapon, this Smith and Wesson tool fails in its purported mission. It is, however, cheaper by roughly half than its competitors, notably Benchmade, which will be a selling point to some.
 
Thanks for the info. Superb pics.

I seem to remember that Benchmade also has a steel version. If so, would that be more or less slippery than the aluminum?

Have you reviewed the BM pens?


Thanks.
 
Thanks for your review. I agree with your comments. The pen screams "weapon" and the clip, even without the logo, would be out of place in a collared shirt pocket with dual screws.
 
Is the bottom half (the part that would be under the cap when closed) of the pen aluminum as well? Just wondering because on the BM, the bottom part is plastic and this looks very similar in design to the BM pen.
 
I have two Benchmade Pens. The writing tip is aluminum on the aluminum model and steel on the stainless.
 
Is the bottom half (the part that would be under the cap when closed) of the pen aluminum as well? Just wondering because on the BM, the bottom part is plastic and this looks very similar in design to the BM pen.

The entire body of the Taylor pen (top and bottom) is aluminum.
 
Looks decent for the price.

I assume a Fisher or Hausen pressurized refill will work.

Looks too much like the Benchmade, though.

What is the diameter?
 
I bought one of these to carry at work.
The tip is VERY pointy like the tip of a lance so would it not behave more like a prison shank than a Kubotan?
I don't want to hit anyone with it unless I absolutely have to but to me it looks like it would enter the human body.

Thoughts?

Wp
 
I bought one of these to carry at work.
The tip is VERY pointy like the tip of a lance so would it not behave more like a prison shank than a Kubotan?
I don't want to hit anyone with it unless I absolutely have to but to me it looks like it would enter the human body.

Thoughts?

Wp


I've played with one. Depending on the amount of striking force, type of clothing worn by the person being tagged, and the part of the body being struck. . . . .yes, there's a very good chance of it penetrating the body.
 
I saw those for sale a while ago...I was confused by them.

Rather then producing a durable pen which could survive impacts...
They chose instead to make a shank and put a pen in it.

If one is inclined to carry a weapon, and is in a place where this is allowed...then carry a real one.
If it isn't allowed a 'pen' like this is likely to get confiscated anyway.

Seems overly Mall Ninja, not just in concept but in execution.

The Cold Steel "Sharkie" seems much closer to the mark.
It's just an oversized marker which happens to be seriously overbuilt...
 
Necro Thread, Phil did you get a chance to play around wit the other S&W Military Police Tactical pen, its chunkier and has the knurling across the center portion of the pen.
 
I have both the S&W and the Schrade, for the price I'd go for the Schrade. I tested both on an impact board, there is hardly any difference between the impact points, a shot to the temple with either will do the job IMHO. Thanks for the review.
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