Other Definitions
pencil lead (dict)

Pencil Lead

Pencil lead is the marking substance inside a pencil or mechanical pencil. It is not actual lead (which is poisonous, but rather a form of graphite. It is called lead because graphite marked like lead.

History

The Napoleonic Wars birthed the modern graphite and clay-based pencil out of necessity. France, under naval blockade imposed by Great Britain, was unable to import the pure graphite sticks from the British Seathwaite Fell mines - the only known source in the world for solid graphite. France was also unable to import the inferior German graphite pencil substitute. In 1795 Nicholas Jacques Cont, a Army officer, discovered that firing the available powdered graphite with clay would work as a susbstitute pencil filler.

Hardness

Pencil lead is graded by hardness (a greater percentage of clay results in a harder lead). H (harder), F, HB and B (softer) are pencils of average hardness. Pencils ranging from 2B to 9B are softer still and are used for sketching; 2H to 9H are harder than average. A common American #2 pencil is equivalent to HB.

Mechanical Pencils

In mechanical pencils, pencil lead is a long, thin rod of graphite. The most common thicknesses are 0.5mm and 0.7mm, and common lengths include 60mm, 75mm, and 120mm. The pencil lead is inserted at the back of the pencil.

External Links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
svefn g englar
premiers of the australian states
willie sutton
port arthur, ontario
applied materials
larry fisher
real time cmix
somnambulist
nora
sheila jackson lee
sina corporation
carioca
gail miller
stateless server
princeton sound lab
blade ii
music n
the shins
north carolina gubernatorial election, 2004
getwiki
correction tape
correction fluid
careware
the corean chronicles
charles erwin wilson
sala
hms essex
sala, slovakia
rumpole of the bailey
max mathews
jsc
nugget
gold nugget
chicken nugget
!xu mythology
red cloud's war
index of fictional places
ramesseum
peter bowles
sjc
big thompson river
melchior
list of radio stations in the united kingdom
david j. parker