I’m sure pretty sure all of us mechanical pencil people have our own favourite lead sizes, grades and brands, but I’ve always been interested in what lead sizes are actually used by the population at large, out there in the real world. Twelve years ago I started making some efforts to actually answer the question, by asking industry sources – retailers, distributors and manufacturers. Some didn’t want to say anything, but a few were happy to give some quite specific answers. On the one hand the information wasn’t particularly confidential, but they also generally didn’t want it shouted from the rooftops. However, over ten years have gone by, and I don’t think they will mind this post. So, here then, a little snippet of real world lead facts.
Leads - 0.3, 0.4, 0.5, 0.7 & 0.9mm |
I asked each of them what percentage of sales was each lead size of their biggest selling technical drafting model of pencil, and of their general writing pencil. The results were surprisingly similar between the brands, and so I average them as below. These are the figures for the NZ market.
Technical Pencil
- 0.3mm = 8% of sales
- 0.5mm = 48%
- 0.7mm = 33%
- 0.9mm = 11%
General Writing Pencil
- 0.5mm = 57% of sales
- 0.7mm = 43%
Sales of lead refills, HB grade only
- 0.3mm = 2% of sales
- 0.5mm = 55%
- 0.7mm = 40%
- 0.9mm = 3%
Secondly, a member of JWIMA, the Japanese Writing Instruments Manufacturers Association, supplied the association statistics for the then three-monthly annual quarter. So, that’s essentially the production of the entire Japanese lead manufacturing industry.
Leads, all grades, standardised as 60mm lengths.
- 0.3mm = 4.3% of production
- 0.4mm = 0.3%
- 0.5mm = 67.8%
- 0.7mm = 24.8%
- 0.9mm = 2.7%
And yes, production was in the many hundreds and hundreds of millions of sticks of lead.
Just as a point of interest, of the 0.4mm lead, only 4% was noted as “for export”. As you might suspect, in the 0.7mm and 0.9mm lead sizes the great majority was noted as “for export”.
And I bet that a lot of the 0.7 & 0.9 mm "for export" was exported to the US. I don't know why , but over here 0.7mm seems to have become the Standard.
ReplyDeleteHi there, was hoping you could help me with the value of a Faber Castell green TK Matic? I've had a lot of trouble finding any information about it.
ReplyDeleteThanks!
Ive been using the AIN .3 in 2b for a while now. I prefer the thinner lead as I'm tiny lettering person. The 2b helps keep the lines dark and legible.
ReplyDeleteMy backup is my uni togas with 4b lead. I'd normally not use lead that soft but the rotation of the lead helps keep it from flat spotting on me.
It'd be interesting to see the spread across different grades.
ReplyDeleteSuch a shame that 0.4mm isn't more common. I was an avid user of 0.5mm lead, and due to my completionist tendencies when it comes to mechanical pencils, I bought a Graph 1000 for Pro in 0.4mm. It was rather expensive and it's hard to find 0.4mm lead other than importing it yourself, but 0.4mm has become my daily driver.
ReplyDeleteI think that most 0.5mm pencil users would switch to 0.4mm if it were widely available. The same goes for 0.3mm users. I think most would like 0.4mm quite a lot.