Let's face it. Everybody
makes mistakes. That's why they put erasers on pencils!
But just how are erasers made? And who makes erasers,
anyway?
A lot of erasers are made
by pencils manufacturers! That makes sense, since we
think of the eraser as a regular component of the everyday
pencil. But pencils didn't always have erasers. The
first patent for attaching an eraser to a pencil was
issued in 1858 to a man from Philadelphia named Hyman
Lipman. And even today in Europe, most pencils are sold
without erasers!
Erasers weren't always
called erasers! The item was originally referred to
as a "rubber," because the tree resin it was
made of "rubbed out" marks made by a pencil.
In Great Britain, the eraser is still called a "rubber!"
More and more of today's
erasers are made from something other than rubber! While
some of the "pink" erasers you find on pencils
are made from synthetic rubber blended with pumice (a
grit that enhances its ability to erase), an increasing
number of erasers are made from vinyl. Vinyl is a type
of durable, flexible plastic.
Today's pencil erasers
are made from either a synthetic rubber compound or
from vinyl. In either case, the raw material is blended
to the proper consistency and is put into a machine
called an "extruder." The eraser material
is forced through a small hole producing a long ribbon
of eraser.
Each ribbon is cut into strands about 3 feet in length.
If the eraser is made of synthetic rubber, the strands
are placed in a "vulcanizer," which cooks
them under pressure to cure the rubber. When cool, the
strands are put into a rotary cutter and chopped into
bits -- called plugs. (Vinyl eraser strands go straight
to the rotary cutter -- vinyl does not need to be vulcanized!)
Rubber eraser plugs must be tumbled to round-off the
edges. The tumbler is a big drum that rotates slowly
-- and it holds 600 pounds of rubber eraser plugs at
a time! Vinyl eraser plugs do not need to be tumbled
-- they're ready to insert right from the cutter.
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