A ballpoint pen, also eponymously known as a bíró (pronounced bee-row or bye-row depending on location), is a modern writing instrument. Ballpoint pens have an internal chamber filled with a viscous ink that is dispensed at the tip during use by the rolling action of a small metal sphere (0.7 mm to 1 mm in diameter); the ink dries almost immediately after contact with paper. Inexpensive, reliable and maintenance-free, they have almost completely replaced the fountain pen.
It has been argued that a design by Galileo Galilei (during the 17th century), was that of a ballpoint pen. A patent dated 1888 on the same basic idea was unused and expired. Slavoljub Eduard Penkala had invented a solid-ink fountain pen in 1907. These earlier pens leaked or clogged due to improper viscosity of the ink and depended on gravity to deliver the ink to the ball. Depending on gravity caused difficulties with the flow and required that the pen be held nearly vertically. The Biro pen used capillary action for ink delivery, solving the flow problems.
In 1943 the Bíró brothers moved to Argentina and on June 10 filed another patent, and formed Bíró Pens of Argentina. The pen was sold in Argentina under the Birome brand, which is how ballpoint pens are still known in Argentina. Laszlo was known in Argentina as Lisandro José Bíró. This new design was licensed by the British, who produced ball point pens for RAF aircrew, who found they worked much better than fountain pens at high altitude.
Eversharp, a maker of mechanical pencils teamed up with Eberhard-Faber in May 1945 to license the design for sales in the United States. At about the same time a US businessman saw a Biro pen in a store in Buenos Aires. He purchased several samples and returned to the U.S. to found the Reynolds International Pen Company, producing the Biro design without license as the Reynolds Rocket. He managed to beat Eversharp to market in late 1945; the first ballpoint pens went on sale at Gimbel's department store in New York City on October 29, 1945 for US$12.50 each (about USD$130 of today's money). This pen was widely known as the rocket in the U.S. into the late 1950s.
Similar pens went on sale before the end of the year in England, and by the next year in most of Europe. Cheap disposable instruments were produced by the BIC Corporation with "Bic" as the tradename; as with 'Hoover' and 'Xerox', the tradename has subsequently passed into general use. With BIC's expanding product range, the original Bic pen design is now termed the Bic Cristal.
Since 1990, Biro's birthday (the 29th of September) is Inventor's Day in Argentina.
Disposable pens are chiefly made of plastic throughout and discarded when the ink is consumed; refillable pens are metal or plastic and tend to be higher in quality and price. The refill tends to replace the entire internal ink reservoir and ball point unit rather than actually refilling it with ink.
The simplest types of ball point pens have a fat cap to cover the tip when the pen is not in use, while others have a mechanism for retracting the tip. This is usually controlled by a button at the bottom and powered by a spring within the pen apparatus, but other possibilities include a pair of buttons, a screw, or a slide.
Early pens were notorious for leaking, giving rise to the 'pocket protector', but changes to the composition of the ink have largely made this a thing of the past. Modern ink is generally more viscous, but contains additives which cause it to thin out under pressure. As the pen is pushed against the paper, the ball causes the ink pressure to rise slightly, and thus thin out; as the pen is lifted, the pressure drops, and the ink thickens again.
In modern days, the fashion is more of gel pens and a large variety of colors. Ballpoint pens usually offer black, blue, red and green which are easiest to read. The most popular color is probably black, closely followed by blue.
The most recent developments in the technology include:
In recent years, the ballpoint pen has become a popular art medium, as demonstrated by such websites as biro-art.com
Second, they write with the greatest ink flow when perpendicular to the paper, but as the angle is increased the line width gradually decreases; at some angle, when the edge of the ball socket brushes against the surface of the paper, the line width is reduced to zero and the pen ceases to write. (By way of contrast, a rollerball pen has a thin line when perpendicular to the paper, but the line width increases suddenly as the angle is increased and a blob forms between the tip of the ball and the edge of the socket.)
Third, a ballpoint pen's ink is typically not as bright on paper as its liquid or gel ink counterparts.
These characteristics have consequences for the grip with which the pen is held. First, one tends to bear down on a ballpoint to get a stronger line, and this increases tension in the hand. (One way of getting a stronger line, comparable in intensity to a rollerball line, is to use a broad line ballpoint, with a 1.2mm diameter, or greater, ball size. Most ballpoints have a thin or medium ball.)
Second, one has to hold the pen sufficiently vertically for it to roll across the paper and not to scratch. Most people nowadays are so accustomed to writing nearly perpendicularly that they do not realize that there are other, possibly better, ways to hold a pen.
There are two kinds of pens that can write at greater angles than ballpoint pens: fountain pens and felt-tipped pens. Both of these types of pen also write with less pressure and therefore with less tension in the hand.
Writing instruments | Hungarian culture
قلم جاف | Kuglepen | Kugelschreiber | Pastapliiats | Bolígrafo | Globkrajono | Bolaluma | Stylo à bille | Bolígrafo | Pulpen | Penna a sfera | עט כדורי | Balpen | ボールペン | Długopis | Kulspetspenna | 圓珠筆
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