Daniel sent us this one, and I have to say, I feel this in my bones. He's spent a decade as a tech enthusiast building out an inventory system, and the recurring nightmare is this: you find a tiny plastic part, a USB receiver, some mysterious doodad, and you have zero way to label it without destroying it. The fine-tipped 0.7 millimeter paint markers are incredible, but even those aren't as extra-fine as they claim, and applying them to something the size of a fingernail is genuinely hard. So the question is: short of engraving, are there tools and techniques for reliably marking very small things? And at this scale, does the traditional resilience of oil-based solutions actually hold up, or does the chemistry start working against you?
This is one of those questions where the answer gets more interesting the deeper you go. Because you're right, the 0.7 millimeter paint marker is a blunt instrument for this job. And the first thing we have to talk about is why that number is basically a lie.
Of course it is.
7 millimeters refers to the felt nib, not the line it produces. On a non-porous surface like metal or hard plastic, the actual line from a 0.7 millimeter tip typically lands between 1.0 and 1.On porous plastics like ABS or polycarbonate, it can spread even wider. You're getting nearly double the advertised width, and at the scale we're talking about, that's the difference between a readable inventory ID and an illegible blob.
What's actually happening? Why does the ink spread that much?
First, the pigment particle size in oil-based industrial paint markers is typically five to fifteen microns. That's the fundamental limit. You can't draw a line thinner than your pigment particles can physically arrange themselves. But the bigger issue is capillary action. The solvent in these markers, usually xylene or toluene, is designed to etch into the plastic to create permanence. That etching action also means the solvent wicks along the surface, carrying pigment with it beyond the tip contact point. You're essentially watching the ink crawl outward microscopically.
The very thing that makes it permanent also makes it imprecise.
Permanence and precision are chemically at odds in oil-based systems. The solvent needs to be aggressive enough to bite into the substrate, but that aggressiveness means it doesn't stay where you put it. It's the tradeoff nobody talks about on the packaging.
Then you add the tremor factor.
A typical caffeinated adult has a hand tremor of about 0.When you're trying to place a 0.7 millimeter line, that tremor represents a fourteen percent error in placement. For something like the letter A or the number eight, where you need multiple intersecting strokes, that error compounds. You end up with characters that are technically there but completely unreadable.
I've seen this in practice. You try to write A1 on one of those tiny metal tags on a USB-C cable, and the one just becomes a blob. You know it says A1 because you're the one who wrote it, but anyone else looking at it would need a forensic document examiner.
That's on a surface that's maybe five by three millimeters. Let's talk about what happens when you're dealing with something even smaller. A SIM card ejector tool, a tiny PCB jumper, one of those little screws that holds a laptop together. The marking surface area is smaller than a fingernail, and a standard industrial paint marker like the Edding 780, which produces a 1.5 to 2 millimeter line, is basically a paint roller at that scale.
Like doing calligraphy with a broom.
That's not far off. So let's address the first part of the question: does the traditional resilience of oil-based solutions diminish at this scale? The answer is yes, but not because the chemistry gets weaker. It's because the legibility fails before the durability does. An oil-based mark that's bled into an unreadable smear is permanently unreadable. The permanence worked, but you lost the information.
Which brings us to the PCB marker exception, because this is where things get interesting. The prompt mentions that manufacturers make both oil-based and non-oil markers for PCB work. What's the difference?
This is a great distinction. Non-oil PCB markers, like the Edding 404 or the Staedtler Lumocolor, use a fast-drying water-based acrylic ink. Because it's water-based, it doesn't etch into the plastic. It sits on top and dries quickly, which means the line stays much closer to the tip width. You can get actual line widths of 0.5 to 0.8 millimeters from a 0.4 millimeter tip, which is dramatically sharper than what you'd get from an oil-based marker.
You're trading away some durability.
Acrylic ink doesn't chemically bond with the substrate the way an oil-based solvent does. It adheres mechanically, which means it's more vulnerable to abrasion and solvents. If you're marking something that's going to sit in a drawer for five years, that's fine. If it's going to be handled daily or exposed to cleaning chemicals, the mark will degrade.
You get precision at the cost of longevity. What if you want both?
This is where we get into combination approaches, and I want to talk about three specific techniques that solve different parts of this problem. The first one is the acrylic pen plus UV-cured clear coat method.
Walk me through that.
You use a water-based acrylic pen like the Edding 404 with a 0.4 millimeter tip to write your inventory ID with high precision. Then you seal it with a UV-curable clear coat, something like SolarEZ, which is a resin that hardens under ultraviolet light. Once cured, that clear coat has a Shore D hardness of seventy to eighty, which is harder than most industrial paint marker inks. It creates a transparent armor layer over your precise mark.
You're basically laminating the mark in place.
You get the precision of a technical pen with near-paint-marker permanence. And because the clear coat flows into the microscopic texture of the surface before curing, it mechanically locks everything in place. It's not chemically bonded like an oil-based etch, but the physical encapsulation is extremely durable.
That's clever. What's the catch?
It's a two-step process, so it takes more time. You also need a UV light source, though a basic nail curing lamp works fine and costs about twenty dollars. And it works best on flat or gently curved surfaces. On something with sharp contours, the clear coat can pool unevenly.
For one-off marking of tiny plastic parts, that's solution number one. What's the second approach?
The Kapton stencil plus paint marker hybrid. This is the technique used for marking aerospace connectors, and it's the most underrated method in the inventory labeling toolkit.
That's the amber-colored polyimide tape that can handle ridiculous temperatures.
Up to four hundred degrees Celsius. It's used in spacecraft, in electronics manufacturing, anywhere you need a material that won't melt, off-gas, or degrade under extreme conditions. For our purposes, the key property is that it's available in thicknesses down to 0.1 millimeters, and it can be laser-cut into incredibly precise stencils.
You have a stencil made with your inventory ID, you apply it to the object, and then you paint over it with a standard industrial paint marker.
The stencil acts as a physical dam. The paint marker can bleed and pool all it wants within the open areas of the stencil, but the Kapton walls contain it. When you peel off the stencil, you get a razor-sharp edge. You can achieve line widths down to 0.3 millimeters with this method, using a paint marker that on its own would produce a 1.5 millimeter blob.
The stencil itself, where do you get that made?
Services like Pololu or SendCutSend will laser-cut custom Kapton stencils for you. A sheet of fifty stencils costs about five dollars. You send them your design file, they cut it, and you have a supply of perfectly identical marking masks.
That's absurdly cheap for what you're getting.
It really is. And for batch marking, where you have ten or more identical parts that all need the same inventory ID, this is the most efficient method. Apply the stencil, swipe the marker, peel, done. Every mark is identical, every mark is sharp, and you're using an industrial paint marker so the durability is there.
What about curved surfaces? A USB dongle isn't flat.
Kapton tape is flexible. For gentle curves, the stencil conforms well enough. For tight curves, like the barrel of a small connector, you'd want to wrap the stencil and use a thinner paint application. It's not perfect for every geometry, but it handles most of the common cases.
Alright, so we've got the acrylic-plus-UV-sealant for one-offs, and the Kapton stencil for batch work. What's the third approach?
This is the one that I think will surprise people. It comes from an entirely different industry: nail art.
I'm listening.
Professional nail artists routinely paint intricate designs on a surface that's about five millimeters wide. They use ultra-fine brushes, down to 0.1 millimeters, and they work with UV-cured gel polish. That gel polish, once cured, is incredibly hard and solvent-resistant. We're talking Shore D hardness of seventy to eighty, which is in the same range as industrial coatings.
You're saying the solution to marking tiny tech components is to raid a nail salon's supply cabinet.
1 millimeter detail brush, a pot of black UV gel polish, and a curing lamp. You can paint sub-millimeter inventory IDs with precision that no paint marker can touch, and the durability is industrial-grade. Nail artists put these coatings through daily abuse, hand washing, solvents, physical impact, and they hold up for weeks on a living, flexing substrate. On a static piece of plastic or metal, they'll last effectively forever.
That's the kind of cross-domain hack that sounds ridiculous until you think about it for five seconds, and then you realize it's actually brilliant.
It really is. And the gel polish comes in every color imaginable, so you can color-code your inventory while you're at it. White gel on black plastic, black gel on metal, whatever gives you the best contrast.
I have to ask about the learning curve, though. Painting with a 0.1 millimeter brush isn't something most people can just do.
It takes practice, no question. But the gel polish has an advantage here: it doesn't dry until you cure it. With a paint marker or acrylic ink, you're racing against evaporation. With UV gel, you can take your time. If you mess up a stroke, you wipe it off with alcohol and start over. You only cure it when you're happy with the result. That's a huge advantage for precision work.
You're not fighting the clock, and you get unlimited do-overs until you hit the UV light.
And for anyone doing this frequently, the skill develops faster than you'd expect. After marking twenty or thirty parts, you develop a steady hand for it. It's not like learning calligraphy from scratch, it's more like learning to write small and deliberately.
Let's talk about the engraving question, because the prompt asks whether engraving is ultimately the best way to go.
It depends entirely on your budget and your material. Let's break this into two categories: rotary engraving and laser engraving.
Start with rotary.
A rotary engraver is basically a Dremel with a tiny carbide bit. You can get bits down to 0.5 millimeters, and with a steady hand and a jig, you can engrave readable marks on metal and hard plastic. The mark is truly permanent, it's physical, it can't be wiped off or dissolved.
It requires significant skill. On a curved USB dongle, you need a jig to hold the part steady, and you need to control the depth and angle of the bit. One slip and you've gouged a line across your component. It's also slow. Each character takes seconds to engrave, and if you're doing alphanumeric IDs, you're spending a minute or more per part. For one-offs, it's viable. For batch work, it's painful.
This is where the serious precision lives. A twenty watt fiber laser, something like a JPT MOPA system, can achieve a line width of 0.05 millimeters on stainless steel. That's fourteen times finer than a 0.7 millimeter paint marker's actual line. You can engrave QR codes, serial numbers, anything you want, at a resolution that's basically limited by the material's grain structure, not the laser.
That's absurd.
It's microscopic. And because it's a laser, there's no physical contact, no tool wear, no tremor issue. The beam is steered by galvanometers, which are essentially precision mirrors, and the positioning accuracy is in the single-digit microns.
What's the cost barrier?
A decent twenty watt fiber laser starts around three thousand dollars. That's the entry point for something reliable. You can find cheaper diode lasers, but they don't have the power density to mark metal effectively. For plastic, a CO2 laser works well for engraving, but it can cause melting and discoloration on certain materials. You need to match the laser wavelength to the material.
For the home user with a drawer full of mysterious USB receivers, a three thousand dollar laser is not the answer.
But there's an important middle ground here: outsourcing. Services that do laser engraving will mark small parts for a few dollars each. If you have a batch of metal parts that need permanent, sub-millimeter marks, you can send them out and get them back with perfect engraving. It's not the DIY solution, but it's the correct solution for certain use cases.
Let's go back to the materials question for a moment. The prompt mentions marking both metal and plastic. Are there different best approaches depending on the substrate?
Metal is actually easier in some ways because it's non-porous. Ink doesn't wick into metal, it sits on top. The challenge with metal is adhesion. Oil-based markers work well because the solvent etches the surface slightly, creating mechanical grip. Acrylic markers can struggle on polished metal because there's nothing for the ink to grab onto.
For metal, the Kapton stencil plus oil-based paint marker is probably the sweet spot for DIY.
I'd say so. The stencil gives you precision, the oil-based paint gives you adhesion and durability. For plastic, it's more nuanced. ABS and polycarbonate are porous enough that acrylic markers adhere well. Polypropylene and polyethylene are low surface energy plastics, and almost nothing sticks to them without surface treatment. You'd need to flame-treat or plasma-treat those surfaces before marking.
Which is getting into territory that most people aren't going to touch.
If you're dealing with polyethylene parts, your best bet is probably a physical label or a laser engrave. Paint markers, even industrial ones, will eventually flake off.
What about the specific case of PCB marking? The prompt mentions that manufacturers make both oil-based and non-oil markers for this. Why would you choose one over the other?
For PCB work, the non-oil markers are generally preferred because they don't risk damaging the solder mask or the board substrate. The water-based acrylic ink dries quickly, doesn't conduct electricity, and can be removed with alcohol if you need to rework the board. Oil-based markers are used when you need the mark to survive the soldering process, specifically wave soldering or reflow, where the board is going to see temperatures above two hundred degrees Celsius.
It's a heat resistance question.
It's also a chemical resistance question. If the board is going to be washed with flux remover after soldering, an acrylic mark might dissolve. An oil-based mark will survive. But for the hobbyist marking component values or test points on a board that's already assembled, the non-oil acrylic pen is the better choice. Sharper line, no solvent damage, and it does the job.
I want to circle back to something you mentioned earlier about the tremor problem. The prompt specifically calls out that after a few cups of coffee, hand tremors can ruin an inventory ID. Are there techniques for stabilizing your hand at this scale?
The simplest is to brace your writing hand against your other hand, which is holding the part. Create a three-point contact: the part rests on the table, your non-dominant hand holds the part and rests on the table, and your dominant hand rests on your non-dominant hand. You're building a human tripod.
Reducing the degrees of freedom.
Each point of contact eliminates a source of wobble. The other technique is to move the part, not the pen. For very small marks, it's sometimes easier to hold the marker stationary and move the object against the tip. Your gross motor control is actually better at slow, deliberate movements than your fine motor control is at tiny, precise ones.
That's counterintuitive but it makes sense. You're trading a difficult fine motor task for an easier gross motor task.
It's the same principle that makes a microscope stage work. You don't move the objective lens around the slide, you move the slide under the lens. Your hands are better at that kind of movement.
For the Kapton stencil method, the tremor problem basically disappears because the stencil is doing the precision work for you.
That's the beauty of it. The stencil defines the edges. Your job is just to apply enough paint to fill the stencil openings. You could do it with a noticeable tremor and the result would still be sharp because the Kapton is doing the containment.
Let's talk about something the prompt hints at but doesn't fully articulate. When you're dealing with objects this small, the marking surface itself might not be flat. A USB receiver has a curved plastic housing. A SIM tray has a tiny flat area surrounded by curves. How do you deal with non-flat surfaces?
For curved surfaces, the acrylic pen plus UV sealant method actually has an advantage. Because the clear coat is a liquid that's cured in place, it conforms to the curve. You're not trying to apply a flat stencil to a curved surface. The gel polish method also handles curves well because you're painting with a brush that follows the contour.
The stencil method struggles more with curves.
It does, but there's a workaround. If you use a very thin Kapton tape, 0.05 millimeters instead of 0.1, it becomes flexible enough to wrap around gentle curves. For tighter curves, you can cut the stencil into smaller sections. Instead of one stencil that says A17, you have three tiny stencils for A, one, and seven, and you apply them individually along the curve.
That's tedious but effective.
Most of these solutions involve some degree of tedium. The question is whether the tedium is worth the result. For a part you're going to use for years, spending five minutes to mark it properly is a good investment.
I want to shift gears slightly and talk about the future of this problem. The prompt mentions being a tech enthusiast for ten years and building an inventory system. As 3D printing becomes more common, do you think we'll see embedded labeling, where the inventory ID is printed directly into the object's surface texture?
That's already happening in some contexts. If you're designing and printing your own parts, you can emboss or deboss an ID directly into the model. The label is part of the geometry. It can't wear off, it can't be removed, and it doesn't require any post-processing. The limitation is that it only works for parts you're manufacturing yourself. For off-the-shelf components, you're still stuck with aftermarket marking.
There's the digital twin angle. RFID tags, NFC chips, eventually everything has a digital identity and you just scan it.
For high-value items, sure. But the cost of an NFC tag is still measured in cents, and for a drawer full of fifty identical screws, you're not going to tag each one. The marker is here to stay for the low-cost, high-volume world of tiny parts. It's just a question of using the right marker for the right part.
Alright, let's pull this together into something actionable. If someone listening has a collection of tiny, identical components they need to label, what's the decision tree?
First question: what's the material? If it's metal and you need sub-0.5 millimeter precision, and budget isn't a barrier, fiber laser engraving is the answer. Either buy a laser or outsource it. If it's metal and you're doing it yourself, Kapton stencil plus oil-based paint marker gives you sharp, permanent marks at low cost.
For one-off plastic parts, the acrylic pen plus UV clear coat. You get precision and durability in a two-step process that costs maybe thirty dollars in supplies. For batch plastic parts, Kapton stencils again, but with an acrylic marker if solvent resistance isn't critical, or an oil-based marker if it is.
The wildcard is the UV gel polish method, which works on both metal and plastic and gives you sub-millimeter control for the price of a nail art kit.
That's the cheat code. A ten-dollar brush, a fifteen-dollar pot of gel polish, and a twenty-dollar curing lamp. Forty-five dollars total, and you have a marking system that rivals industrial solutions for precision.
The nail art industry has been quietly solving this problem for decades while the rest of us were squinting at blurry paint marker blobs.
Cross-pollination between hobbies is where the best hacks come from. Nail artists need durability, precision, and color range on a five-millimeter canvas. That's exactly the requirement set for marking tiny tech components. The fact that it took this long for the two worlds to collide is almost surprising.
Most people don't spend their weekends thinking about the material science of gel polish.
That's what we're here for.
To answer the core question directly: no, engraving is not the only way to get sub-millimeter permanent marks. There are at least three viable alternatives, each with different cost, skill, and durability tradeoffs. The Kapton stencil method is probably the single most underrated technique, and the UV gel polish hack is the one that most people haven't considered but should.
To address the question about whether oil-based resilience diminishes at this scale, the answer is that the chemistry doesn't get weaker, but the practical utility drops because legibility fails before durability does. A permanent blur is still a blur.
Which is a good summary of several life situations, now that I think about it.
That's a different episode.
Alright, before we wrap, I want to leave people with one forward-looking thought. As 3D printing becomes more accessible, we might see a shift toward designing markability into parts from the start. A small flat area specifically for labeling, a recessed panel that accepts a printed insert, texture-coded surfaces that you can identify by touch. The problem we've been discussing exists partly because manufacturers don't design for aftermarket identification. That might change.
It's a design philosophy question. Right now, most small components are designed for function and manufacturability, not for user identification. But as the maker movement grows and more people are managing their own inventories of tiny parts, there's market pressure to include marking surfaces. Even something as simple as a small flat spot with a matte finish makes a huge difference.
The matte finish point is actually important. Glossy surfaces are harder to mark because the ink beads up. A matte surface gives the ink something to grip, even at the microscopic level.
Surface texture is half the battle. If you've ever tried to write on a glossy plastic with a fine marker, you know the ink just skates around. A quick pass with fine-grit sandpaper, just enough to knock the gloss off, makes a dramatic difference in adhesion and line quality.
That's a practical tip that costs nothing and takes five seconds.
It's one of those things that's obvious in retrospect but easy to overlook when you're frustrated and staring at a shiny plastic part wondering why nothing will stick to it.
We should probably acknowledge that this entire episode is about a problem that maybe one percent of people will ever encounter, and for that one percent, it's maddening.
That's the nature of niche expertise. Most people will never need to label a SIM card ejector tool. But for the person who has a drawer full of identical tiny parts and an inventory system that depends on being able to identify them, this is useful knowledge.
The principles scale. Even if you're labeling something larger, understanding why your 0.7 millimeter marker produces a 1.2 millimeter line, understanding the tradeoff between oil-based permanence and water-based precision, that makes you better at choosing the right tool for any marking task.
Knowledge that transfers is the best kind of knowledge.
Alright, I think we've covered the ground. Let's do the thing.
Now: Hilbert's daily fun fact.
Hilbert: The word "vanilla" derives from the Spanish "vainilla," meaning "little pod" or "little sheath," a diminutive of "vaina" — which itself comes from the Latin "vagina," meaning sheath or scabbard. The term entered European languages in the early sixteenth century after Spanish explorers encountered the orchid's pod-like fruit. Meanwhile, in Belize, the native vanilla species Vanilla planifolia was being cultivated and traded by the Maya centuries before any European set foot in Mesoamerica, used primarily as a flavoring for cacao drinks rather than the standalone spice we know today.
...right.
This has been My Weird Prompts. Thanks to our producer Hilbert Flumingtop for keeping the fun facts coming, and thanks to everyone who sends in questions that make us think about things like the particle size of industrial paint marker pigments. If you've found a weird, effective way to mark your tiny tech, we want to hear about it. Send us your prompts at myweirdprompts.
If you enjoyed this episode, leave us a review wherever you get your podcasts. It helps other people find the show.
Until next time.