Why should I buy a ballpoint when a rollerball covers the same bases? Serious question...
Why should I buy a ballpoint when a rollerball covers the same bases? Serious question...
Ballpoints work better on shiny paper and newsprint, and don't bleed. Refills last longer. You feel safer lending one.
I see no need for a ballpoint pen. Rollerballs take a variety of refills that can fill any void of a ballpoint. I purchased a Lamy 2000 (L2K) ballpoint pen a few years ago, quickly sold it, and then picked up a L2K rollerball that still remains part of my EDC with a L2k fountain pen (BB) and a L2k mechanical pencil. I use either Pilot G2 or Pentel EnerGel needlepoint refills. The thin line of the Pentel refills works great on any paper.
"Love is the final fight."
Ahriman4891 (December 20th, 2018)
A ballpoint often works better than a rollerball in situations where you don't wish to be encumbered by removing the cap from a pen so that you can quickly write something.
I'm imagining a really busy immigration scene at an airport when you quickly need to fill in a form of some sort and you're surrounded by people everywhere and have several bags in one hand. A twist action ballpoint seems like the right tool for that job.
Regards, Chrissy | My Review Blog: inkyfountainpens
Things a ballpoint pen can do better than a rollerball:
- sketch on cartridge and Eco drawing paper
- label freezer bags
- fill in The Guardian crossword
- write in shiny greetings cards
- release the case on my phone
- fill in forms that still use NCR (yes these are still around)
- provide a temporary fix for my car parcel shelf
Regards, Chrissy | My Review Blog: inkyfountainpens
I never had a problem with my Signos - other than how quickly the refills got used up in writing. You might want to try the Jetstream. I find the bodies irritating, but the refills swap into Signo bodies. They're very still smooth and the ink capacity seems like it's two or three times higher. A 0.5mm Jetstream is about the same as a 0.38 Signo. (Although at the moment my non-fp choice is the Japan-only Ultra Fine version of the Eye/Vision, which is a capped pen.)
Rollerballs were sort of a gateway writing instrument for me, when I began keeping my journal with them, maybe 10 to 12 years ago. They were nicer to write with than ballpoints under "normal" conditions, decent paper, sitting at a table or desk, etc. Then someone said "you should try a fountain pen".
The thing is that now, under almost any conditions where I might use a rollerball, I would prefer to use a fountain pen, and there's no reason why I can't. The ballpoints are useful for "other" conditions. A little Fisher Space Pen rides around in my pants pocket, while my shirt pocket holds a fountain pen and a mechanical pencil (there will probably be more of those in my laptop case or other bag if I'm carrying one). The Fisher may go unused for a couple of weeks, but then I'll need to write something against a vertical surface, outside in the cold, on rough cardboard, you get the idea. Oh, and there's another Space Pen that sits in my car, along with a pencil. I don't have to worry about extremes of temperature ruining it, and indeed it does start right up when I test it.
It's a matter of the right tool for the job. On the rare occasions when I might write on plastic, I'd rather use a Sharpie.
"If a thing is worth doing, it is worth doing badly."
G.K. Chesterton
You want a ballpoint when you want to take notes in an adversarial situation, like with your boss or a banker. A fountain pen tends to tear up your paper; you can lean on a ballpoint more.
"Nothing is enough for the man to whom enough is too little." -Epicurus-
Ballpoint, rollerball and gel refills are on the same grounds: using a rolling ball to get ink on the paper. The difference stay in the ink formula.
Rollerball use liquid ink like a fountain pen
Ballpoint use oil based ink.
Gel use pigments suspended in water based gel.
Now rollerball refills are usually encapsulated in a single type of cartridge. Gel cartridges are similar in design to RB, but there are some of them made in a similar way to Parker Style refill. Ballpoint refills come into couple of standard and proprietary cartridges. Because of that there is a lot of confusion how to differentiate all of them into individual category.
Also, as far as I know, rollerball refills are not document proof. But there are some gel (Pentel Energel Permanent) and some ballpoint refills that are standardized for document proof. Not all BP and Gel refills are document proof!
Another criteria to separate them is that RB are prone to dry if not caped, while Gel and BP refill can take a beat of it, usually if they are not used for a week or so.
The newest Hybrid BP/RB refills are kind of best of both worlds, can write on many surfaces, not drying if not use for a long time uncapped, document proof, come into different cartridge type/shape. I have test and like Schmidt easyFlow, Uniball Jetstream, Papermate InkJoy and Pilot Acroball. But I still don't know what is their ink formula, how is made.
I never got along with rollerballs. Smudges, not waterproof, not good for cheap paper, ink pools of you stop on the paper for whatever reason. Also, being left handed I tend to push rather than pull the tip along, and every letter is a mess.
For me, it's a no.
Never tried a refillable ink, don't know what is it called, inkball pen maybe? Something like the Herbin roller or PenBBS350. Maybe with a good iron gall ink, it would be different. But I'd rather not have to find out the hard way.
I prefer the look of writing from rollerball, but I agree with the comments about about a rollerball's cap. Twist-action ballpoints are a PITA in my hand, because the mechanism inevitably rotates back into the barrel as I write, so I opt for clickers (button or clip) which can be had for very little. I use a lovely vintage sterling Parker Cisele button-action pen, which seems to be in less demand by collectors than the girthier (I made that up) twist-action style.
Tell you what I can get behind, and risk tar and feathering for saying it, but a needlepoint ballpoint. I nearly cried when my mother managed (within half an hour of lending it) to lose my Parker Jotter with an Ohto needlepoint refill and I couldn't get another. Then nearly cried again when Cult Pens had them available again.
I know, I know. Over a ballpoint. I'll go and rotate all my ink bottles in penance. Be back in a month...
catbert (December 20th, 2018)
20% off at Cult Pens at minute.
No, I'm not being paid by Cult Pens. They're Devonians; it would require a trade deal involving some sort of pasty conversion rate and a cream-on-top backstop. It can never happen.
I feel like in regards to "covering all bases" option, the idea being to get something that'll work on paper that a fountain pen one.
In the case of a rollerball, if it is liquid ink you still have the same limitations as a fountain pen (except needing to write at a specific angle), so don't really see the need to have a RB as covering all your bases.
So I aim at either a ballpoint (will write on most everything, and doesn't feather/bleed, and has the pressure requirement for carbon copies) to my preference of using a gel pen (like a Pilot G2) as my main backup, since the gel will not likely feather/bleed, but does take longer to dry than a typical ballpoint.
There's also the Zebra Emulsion ink (sort of a combination of traits).
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