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September 2024

How Four Pens Solve the Same Problem

In this Article:

  • CT scans of four pen types reveal how each solves the same fundamental problem, delivering ink from a reservoir to paper at a controlled rate, through different mechanisms: capillary action through a tapered nib slit, a crimped tungsten carbide ball in a brass socket, a three-point crimped rollerball tip, and a fibrous felt wick.
  • The Majohn A1 fountain pen's nib slit measures 0.128 mm at the base and narrows to 0.016 mm at the tip; the BIC ballpoint's tungsten carbide ball sits in a brass socket with tolerances on the order of microns; both figures are visible and measurable directly in the scan.
  • CT scans of Paper Mate Flair pens from 1966 to 2023, conducted for The New York Times Wirecutter, show cumulative design changes across five decades that reduced the exposed tip volume, helping explain why users reported the pen running out faster than before.
9.19.2024

Writing poses a problem of fluid dynamics that most of us only notice when something goes awry. Ink has to travel from a reservoir through a delivery mechanism and onto paper at a controlled rate, all without flooding, clogging, or running dry. Every pen design is an engineering answer to that problem, and the answers vary considerably. CT imaging makes it possible to examine those answers at the scale where the real decisions are made.

We scanned four pens: a Majohn A1 fountain pen, a BIC ballpoint, a Pilot rollerball, and a Paper Mate Flair felt tip. What the scans reveal is not just how each pen is built, but why each design makes the tradeoffs it does.

Fountain pen: timeless capillary action

The fountain pen is the oldest design in this comparison, and in many ways the most mechanically elegant. Its core principle, capillary action, requires no moving parts and no active pressure. Surface tension and adhesion draw ink through a narrow channel from the reservoir to the tip without any external force.

The scan shows the full assembly of the Majohn A1: the retractable body, the spring-loaded cover that protects the nib when closed, and the nib itself. In the grayscale detail view, we can measure the nib slit directly. At the base, it is 0.128 mm wide. At the tip, it narrows to 0.016 mm, roughly one-eighth of its width at the base. That taper is what regulates ink flow. A wider slit would flood the paper; a narrower one would choke it. The Majohn achieves that geometry at a fraction of the price of the Pilot Vanishing Point it resembles.

Explore the scan

Ballpoint pen: precision manufacturing at scale

The ballpoint pen solved a problem fountain pens couldn't: reliable writing on rough surfaces, in varying orientations, with ink that dries fast enough not to smear. The mechanism is a tungsten carbide ball seated in a brass socket, rotating freely as the pen moves across paper. The ball transfers oil-based ink from the reservoir to the writing surface with each rotation.

The scan shows the ball clearly: denser than the surrounding brass housing and therefore appearing dark red here in the CT image. Also visible are the five ink channels that route ink toward the ball from the reservoir above. The assembly sequence is precise: the ball goes in through the tip opening, and the tip is then crimped inward to trap it, holding it in place while still allowing free rotation. The tolerances on that final crimp are extremely tight, on the order of microns, because the gap between ball and socket controls ink flow. Too tight and the pen skips; too loose and it makes a mess.

Rollerball pen: water-based wonder

The rollerball uses water-based ink, which is thinner than ballpoint ink and flows more freely. That thinner viscosity produces a smoother writing experience with less pressure, but it also means the ink delivery system has to be more carefully controlled to prevent flooding. The scan shows the ball dropped into a stainless steel housing tube and crimped from three directions, a three-point crimp that holds the ball in place while leaving enough clearance for ink to reach it consistently. Like the fountain pen, the rollerball relies primarily on capillary action to deliver ink to the tip, with the low viscosity of the water-based ink making the flow more immediate and sensitive to orientation than a ballpoint. The trade-off is ink consumption: rollerballs run out faster, and water-based inks are more prone to bleeding through paper.

Explore the scan

Felt tip pen: simple mechanism, complex material

The felt tip replaces machined metal components with a porous fibrous tip that both carries and regulates ink. There is no ball, no socket, no slit. Ink wicks through the fiber structure to the writing surface by capillary action, and the density and orientation of the fibers determine how much ink flows and how the line looks.

The scan reveals something the surface can't: how the tip structure changes across decades of the same pen. We scanned Paper Mate Flair pens from 1966 through 2023, work we originally did for The New York Times Wirecutter after readers noticed the pen seemed to be running out of ink faster than before. The CT images show why. The 1966 Flair had a large, fully exposed felt tip with considerable fiber volume. By 1983, the tip had been reduced and a separate plastic point guard added. The 1989 version shows further changes to the collar construction. The 2023 version has a visibly smaller exposed tip surface than the original, with a tighter collar. No single redesign explains the change. The cumulative effect across fifty-seven years does.

The fiber orientation is also visible in the scans, and with it the ink distribution through the tip material. Even in a design this simple, the fluid dynamics are real and the manufacturing decisions matter.

Explore the scans

What the comparison shows

Each of these pens solves the ink delivery problem with a different mechanism: capillary action through a precision-tapered slit, a rotating ball in a crimped metal socket, a ball in a three-point crimp with low-viscosity ink, or a fibrous wick. The engineering ranges from sub-micron tolerances in a commodity product to the organic irregularity of a fiber matrix. What CT adds to the comparison is the ability to see those decisions directly, to measure the nib slit, observe the crimp geometry, and track changes in tip construction across decades without cutting anything open.

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