Want this question answered?
The Royal Air Force popularised the use of ball point because the traditional fountain pens leaked at the higher altitudes.
inventions of ball point penduring the world war pilots use ink filled pens in order to note the details of enemy , but during the flight pens used to leak and cause problem . besides pilots ink pens cause problem to general people also. so a comparatively viscous ink was developed and ball point is used to write, thus leak problem was resolved . ball point pens gives better control over writing and the writing becomes fine . It was also invented first by John Loud in 1888 so that it could write on leather and other rough surfaces, a full 60 years before.
not usually,but if the pen is old and it's really warm or cold day,then it may not work for a limited time
They are both ballpoint pens. The pen introduced in the UK was manufactured by Biro and the popular one sold in the US was (and is) made by Bic. They are very similar. Some people call all ballpoint pens "biros" or "bics".
of course
Osmium
Some ball-point pens.
ink being wet
ball point pens have thin ink tubes then a ball when you write the ball rolls picking ink up from the tube and writing and then ink comes out when you write!
The Biro brothers invented the ball point pen. Years later, the BIC company, which had made its fortune by marketing inexpensive but very functional ball point pens, named one of its ball point pens after them, calling it the Biro.
I'm sure they put it in from the back before assembling it.
Nectar of the gods.
For ball-point pens, the tip of the pen is actually made of a ball bearing, and so the tip of the ball-point pen would be a point until it is worn or not manufactured properly, in which case it might be abit flattened.
The Royal Air Force popularised the use of ball point because the traditional fountain pens leaked at the higher altitudes.
1.Most ball-point pens will draw a line 4,000 to 7,500 feet long.2.The Most expensive ballpoint pen is $730,000.00.3.Angelika Unverhau from Dinslaken (Germany) has collected more than 220,000 ball-point pens (excluding duplicates) from 146 countries. She has been collecting unusual pens since childhood, but decided to take her hobby more seriously in 1990. She founded a club for ball-point pen collectors who meet twice a year to trade pens.
Modern ball point pens have springs and retractable points, but they are basically the same as the original model. A tube of ink feeding a nib, or point, that contains a tiny ball. There have been a few other changes. There are pens that write under water, or that write upside down. Most pens are gravity fed, so they stop writing unless the point is lower than the ink.
I don't think so... the pens to use with Copics are copic multiliners ball points wouldn't be the best. In fact it'd probably be really bad.