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Noodler Waterase + Preppy's
So, I could not resist playing around with a new set of Noodler's Waterase
ink. This is my first time getting a chance to play with wet erase markers instead of dry erase and especially getting to use a nice refillable marker instead of others. It's also my first time with an eye dropper style feed instead of a piston or pump of some sort. The markers are quite brittle feeling, but pretty fun, nonetheless, and I love writing with this Black waterase ink so much more than with the dry erase ones. I've not dealt with the constant drying out that I usually associate with markers and I get a nicer, bolder line than I usually do. So far I have only tested with my small little board at home, but I am going to have to see how well these work as lecture markers in a classroom or collaborative whiteboarding session. I have a feeling that the collaboration could be strange when others use dry erase markers on a board and I am using a wet erase, but many of the boards we have are so bad that we have to wash them off constantly during use anyways. Overally, I am pleased with this pen and ink set, and I have to admit that it it just kind of neat to be able to bring my world of wet ink fountain pens to my whiteboards. Who knows whether I will continue to use them or not? Have the rest of you ever played with these? Did you hate them? Like them? -- Aaron W. Hsu | | http://www.sacrideo.us Programming is just another word for the lost art of thinking. |
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#2
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Noodler Waterase + Preppy's
Koralatov wrote:
I hadn't even *heard* of them, but I agree that it's a great idea, and a good way for Noodler's to expand its potential market. I can report after using them for a bit that the feel when writing with them is the best in a marker board pen that I have had. The ink is *so* nice and free flowing, crisp, and clear. It doesn't dry out, and it writes like a dream. On the other hand, being a wet erase ink, it *does* take a little more work if you want to erase something quickly that you just accidently scribed. That means that you have to be a little more sure that you want to write something when you write it, but otherwise, I do not find the "bulk erase" at the end of a doodle session of when switching out to new ideas to be bad at all. We will see how durable these preppy's are, but the ink is great. -- Aaron W. Hsu | | http://www.sacrideo.us Programming is just another word for the lost art of thinking. |
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