Stylus, Screen
protection Debris Study - The following study was presented at a
New York City Newton User's Group meeting, held in the Apple
Marketing Center in Manhattan in late 1997.)
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Microscope Setup
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About one
month ago, I noticed that my Newton stylus seemed to have
something stuck on it. When I wrote at a certain angle, it seemed
to stick just a bit. A few days later, I got my first screen
scratch. I used a clinical microscope to examine the stylus, and
found what looked like a tiny glass fragment embedded on the tip.
This fragment was utterly undetectable to the naked eye.
I removed
and discarded the original black tip (A). I replaced it with the
tip from a Wacom pen (D). The fit wasn't exactly right, so I put a
piece of shrink tubing on it first, and used a pair of
needle-nosed pliers to screw it into the stylus (C).
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Original and Replacement
Stylus Tips
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Notice that
the Wacom stylus tip (D) does NOT have threads, although the
aluminum stylus does. The tip is held in with friction.
Incidentally, the Wacom tip has the advantage of being white,
which makes it easier to see microscopic debris that may become
embedded in it.
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Bit of
Grit (center) and a Sharp Needle Tip (above)
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The
following day, I again noticed that my stylus seemed to have
something stuck on it. I popped it into my microscope and found a
bit of grit on this new stylus. Here is a snapshot of this piece
of grit. Magnified, the grit looks like a pink stone.
The
bullet-shaped pointer at the top of the image is the point of an
ordinary safety pin. Although the pin looks blunt under
magnification, it was actually very sharp. This gives you an idea
of how small the grit was. The grit was impossible to see with
the naked eye. I cleaned the tip with rubbing alcohol before
taking these pictures, so the grit you see is embedded into the
plastic of the stylus tip. I must have dropped the stylus, and a
microscopic bit of grit became stuck in the soft plastic.
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Enlargement of Grit on
White Stylus Tip
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I am very
careful to keep the stylus in the silo when I'm not writing. I
also keep a handful of alcohol wipes in my bag, and clean my
screen often. (Squeeze out the extra alcohol first.) So my screen
is usually squeeky clean. But like everyone, I do drop my stylus
from time to time.
Conclusion:
Some people believe that the stylus tips are too hard, and that
the plastic scratches the screen. This seems unlikely. It seems
more probable that the stylus gets a bit of grit becomes embedded
in the tip somehow. It's easy to drop your stylus from time to
time. Softer stylus plastic would make the problem worse, not
better.
In the end,
I think this shows how important it is to keep the stylus itself
clean, and to avoid dropping it.
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