The present invention relates to the technical sector of ball-point pens. As is known, these pens comprise an ink reservoir which communicates with a usually cylindrical hole connected to the capillary channel of a tip which has a cavity inside which the ball for writing is seated.
This ball, when the pen is not writing, is kept pressed against a retaining edge, which is also formed on the said tip, in order to prevent the ink from escaping, and this function is performed by a compression-resilient spring which presses on the ball by means of the free end of a straight portion with which the said spring terminates. When the pen is used, being pressed against the surface on which it must write, the abovementioned ball is pressed towards the inside of the tip and, overcoming the resistance of the spring, is displaced from the retaining edge by an amount sufficient to allow the ink used for writing to pass outside.
Since the dimensions of the various component parts named hitherto are, as is known, very small, the abovementioned straight portion of the spring also has a very small diameter (of the order of a few tenths of a millimetre) and, when it is pressed axially during writing, it frequently slides on the surface of the ball, flexing with respect to the remaining part of the spring, and, being deviated from the initial position coinciding with the longitudinal axis of the ball-point pen, is positioned with the free end arranged on a side point of the ball situated in the vicinity of the said retaining edge.
In this position, the straight portion of the spring exerts on the ball, during writing, a force which has a considerable transverse component which keeps the said ball pressed transversely against the retaining edge and, since play is necessarily present between the latter and the ball, the annular cross section through which the ink flows out is not symmetrical with respect to the axis of the pen, having a length which, instead of being constant, varies from zero to a maximum value proceeding circumferentially around the ball, reaching at said maximum value a size which allows the ink to flow out at a rate greater than the flowrate envisaged during the design stage, which flowrate is calculated according to the viscosity of the ink and a uniform width of the annular flow cross section.
The above causes the appearance, along the writing lines, of blotches which are randomly arranged, creating an unaesthetic effect which is automatically associated with a poor quality of the pen.
Moreover, in the region of the abovementioned blotches, the ink, forming zones which have a greater than normal thickness, is unable to dry rapidly and, if inadvertently one brushes against said blotches with one's hand or arm, the result is to cause them to spread, producing unaesthetic smears and also dirtying one's hand or arm.
The inventor of the subject of the present application has aimed to provide a solution to the problem described hitherto and has devised a ball-point pen of the type described above, where the said capillary channel, through which the said straight portion of the ball-pressing spring passes, is provided with means able to prevent this portion from inclining with respect to the longitudinal axis of the pen.
In certain embodiments of the invention, these means consist of enlarged portions which create a narrow section of the capillary channel inside which the said straight portion of the spring is inserted in an approximately complementary manner with a minimum amount of play.
The subject of the present invention therefore consists of a ball-point pen as described in the accompanying Claim 1. A more detailed description of two preferred embodiments of the ball-point pen according to the invention will now be provided, with reference also to the accompanying drawings in which:
If we consider
This ball is kept pressed against a retaining edge 9t formed on the contour towards the outside of the said cavity 9, by the thrust exerted by a compression-resilient spring 6 which terminates in a straight portion 6r aligned with the longitudinal axis M-M of the ball-point pen 101, the free end 6p of which (shown in continuous lines) is in contact with the ball 5. This straight portion 6r passes coaxially through a cylindrical capillary channel 3 and, when the ball-point pen 101 is used for writing, as shown in the figure, the force Q acting on the ball 5 is transmitted to it at a point P and causes flexing thereof with respect to the point O where the straight portion 6r is connected to the remaining parts of the spring 6, causing it to incline (to the right in the drawing) with respect to the said axis M-M.
Consequently, from that moment onwards, the straight portion 6r exerts on the ball 5 a non-axial reactive force which has a significant component in the transverse direction which causes the disadvantageous effects described above.
In
In both the cases illustrated in
With a ball-point pen according to the invention, it has therefore been possible to achieve the predefined object of the inventor, namely that of providing a ball-point pen with writing lines which are more uniform and without the formation of blotches and/or ragged edges.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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02220103 | Dec 2003 | CH | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB04/04200 | 12/16/2004 | WO | 12/7/2005 |