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Nice, cool stuff. High school hand drafting taught me a lot about the practical differences between hardness weights and their uses (e.g. center lines may require different weight than dimensions; can't remember specifics at this point). This page goes into much more detail beyond drafting as it's the page for "pencil".
Until today I still did not know where a (scantron-required, supposedly) #2 pencil falls on this chart! The other chart in the article shows that #2=HB, which is about as confusing as the could've made it.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:PencilGradingChart.png

A confusing thing about pencil lead for test marking is that while a #2/HB hardness is usually specified, there were specially marketed pencils that were actually softer. The pencils and leads were generically branded as "mark sense". They had a higher graphite content to improve electrical conductivity, but which also made the leads softer. (Scanning machines initially used electrodes, then switched to optical sensors.) I haven't been able to test many samples, but I think "mark sense" pencils were about 4B.
Another confusing consumer-facing classification that persists
What's confusing about it? More Bs = more black (soft), more Hs = more hard.

The only thing slightly confusing is 'F', which is just a ½H.

The opposite of black is not hard

Why do you need two letters for a single parameter?

You also forgot HB, not just F

And the other two columns in the table

I have seen more discussion on this subject that I would expect to. People take pencils seriously on HN!