Well yes...but why would you want to? The lead in a pencil is composed of graphite, not actual lead. Graphite is a soft form of carbon and very greasy. See link.
Lead is an element, it is not made of anything but lead. But if you are talking about pencil lead then pencil lead is made of graphite.
The number of the pencil is based on the type of carbon lead used inside. The thicker the carbon lead gets the higher the number of the pencil becomes. If you notice a mechanical pencil is 0.9mm in diameter so it would be called a #0.9 pencil. A #2 pencil's lead is 2mm in diameter. So Why would we call a pencil a #3 pencil? Because it's lead is 3mm in diameter.
A o.7 mechanical pencil will do the job.
the lead in a lead pencil is made from clay and graphite
About 3 seconds ago. "Lead" pencils are the graphite ones we use all the time, those yellow things that you sharpen in a pencil sharpener. Lead is dark gray and leaves such a mark on paper. It isn't really lead in the pencil, we just say that.
A typical lead pencil does not actually contain lead. The "lead" in a pencil is made of graphite, which is a crystalline form of carbon. Therefore, there is 0% lead in a lead pencil.
There is no lead in pencil - Pencil is made from graphite
Pencil lead is a compound
If your asking if the pencil has Lead, then the answer is that most pencils do NOT have lead in them anymore.
Pencil lead isn't really lead, it is graphite, a form of carbon. Pencil lead doesn't have any lead in it whatsoever.
we get lead of pencil from the mixture of clay and graphite
Pencil lead is a conductor.
A 9mm pencil lead is thicker than a 7mm pencil lead.
Pencil lead is made of graphite and clay. Newer recipes for pencil lead use waxy polymers to bind the graphite to produce a lead that does not snap when the pencil is flexed.
lead pen because a lead pencil is a regular pencil.
Because there is no lead in them any more.
a no. 1 pencil lead