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anti theft casing? more like "hey can I borrow that?" and you not wanting to be mean, "sure!" then you forget or the person walks away before you can catch them. so the next day you ask, "hey can I have my pen back?" and they're like "oh, I lost it" or "oh, I lent it so someone else, sorry. it's just a pen.. i'll get you a new one!" no, it wasn't just a cheap G2, it was an 6-8 dollar pen that you made a special trip to the store for and spent five minutes reading an instructable to make it. lol.
That's where the old bartender/waiter mantra comes in to play. "One to lend, one to lose and one to use."
NEVER be generous with your good pen. I lost my favourite pen of all time through that. I felt terrible about it for MONTHS after and still get a pang of sadness any time I go to write a letter now. T'was a gift from someone no longer with us.
The short pens you get in some shops and bookies are good loaners (don't put them in a pocket or bag though as they will leak - good for the desk though)... as are the cheap and nasty Bic disposables.
If it's life or death and someone needs to use your good pen tell them they can use it right in front of you and take it nowhere or find another pen. So they think you're an arse? Who cares... those who don't appreciate wanting to hang onto your good pen are thieving savages who wouldn't understand the beauty of writing with a good pen if you got them to pen a million words with one and then go to a scratchy, gummed up Bic ball point.
The idea in itself is good; I tried it and it worked fine.
The problem is that I really can't tell any difference between the original ink and the Monte Blanc one. They write exactly the same. Can I have my $14 back, please?
Yeah, turns out I'm a pen snob, but I couldn't tell the difference between writing with a Mont Blanc and most roller ball pens. The only difference was the solid feel of the pen. Now, fountain pens are another thing all together...
Ill take my thirteen dollar flat black write in the rain pen any day, you all can argue about what pen is best. but if it works in the rain and the sand in iraq and afghanistan then itll work in a class room.
The "write in the rain pens" use the Fischer Space Pen cartridge. So rest assured, not only will it stand up to the sands of Iraq and Afghanistan, it will write under water and in the depths of space.
Isn't pressurized; uses capillary action in order to dispense the ink. That's why it doesn't squirt everywhere when you pull the tip off a refill cartridge. Get your tubular facts straight, please.
Ah. Didn't know the tech with that one; still, if there's enough resin that it won't leak even though it's under pressure, it's still actually using capillary action to draw the ink out. I think that the cartridge uses the pressure to get the ink into the thing and pressurize it in a way that more can fit, but it isn't written with due to the pressure.
Both Russia and NASA have used Pencils and the Fischer space pen. Neither agency contributed one cent towards development, but purchased the pens after they had been developed.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_pen
There's a link to a "Scientific American" article cited on that page. I would've pasted that link, but instructables doesn't seem to want to allow query parameters on a URL.
What about a 30 cent pencil? Works in space, and under water :P Just kidding, I love the idea behind this. I use a completely solid metal parker pen, because that's the only pen I can't chew on and it won't break. It doesn't write really good though.
"One to lend, one to lose and one to use."
NEVER be generous with your good pen. I lost my favourite pen of all time through that. I felt terrible about it for MONTHS after and still get a pang of sadness any time I go to write a letter now. T'was a gift from someone no longer with us.
The short pens you get in some shops and bookies are good loaners (don't put them in a pocket or bag though as they will leak - good for the desk though)... as are the cheap and nasty Bic disposables.
If it's life or death and someone needs to use your good pen tell them they can use it right in front of you and take it nowhere or find another pen. So they think you're an arse? Who cares... those who don't appreciate wanting to hang onto your good pen are thieving savages who wouldn't understand the beauty of writing with a good pen if you got them to pen a million words with one and then go to a scratchy, gummed up Bic ball point.
-Ash- Ditto, I choose You!
-Ditto- Why'd you say that? I already sliced Paul's face off and collected his blood to use a syrup on our pancakes!
Wait what?
:)
The problem is that I really can't tell any difference between the original ink and the Monte Blanc one. They write exactly the same. Can I have my $14 back, please?
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_pen
There's a link to a "Scientific American" article cited on that page. I would've pasted that link, but instructables doesn't seem to want to allow query parameters on a URL.
They've mostly used felt-tip pens; they work great in zero-g!
And ANOTHER point, computermabob???