(04-25-2018, 06:47 PM)NaturalSynthetic Wrote:Understood.(04-25-2018, 06:23 PM)jmudrick Wrote:(04-25-2018, 06:16 PM)NaturalSynthetic Wrote: Both are inferior to the original Shave King in purpose. The Shave King had smaller grooves to hold water via tension after rinsing to bring water to the face and hydrate the lather. With large groves its just deco. YMMV and all that
I'd say 90% of the reviews of the GSK find it to be too mild, especially compared to the Yaqi/RR. I never noticed hydration being an issue as a general rule and figure most of the appeal is the look and not its autolube gimmickry. I see very few actually using the GSK as a regular shaver.
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YMMV but that was the purpose Joseph Mellon had is designing the razor. You can find it under Patent US2374612A. The relevant portion is
April 24, 1945. .1. M. MELLON SAFETY RAZOR Filed Jan. 29, 1944 INVENYTOR. JOSEPH M. MELLO/V Patented Apr. 24, 1945 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE SAFETY RAZOR Joseph M. Mellon, Detroit, Mich. Application January'29', 1944, Serial No. 520,333
3 Claims. My invention relates to a new and useful improvement in a safety razor, and has for its object the provision of a safety razor so constructed and arranged that when dipped in water or placed in a running stream of water, it will retain a quantity of the water and release the same when the cutting edge of the blade is placed against the face.
It is another object of the invention to provide a safety razor so constructed and arranged that it may moisten the lather immediately preceding the cutting blade as it is drawn over the face.
Another object of the invention is the provision of a safety razor having a back plate provided at its opposite edges with transversely directed longitudinally spaced apart slots of such a width as to provide water receiving and retaining spaces so thatas the razor is drawn over the face in the shaving'operation, the water retained in the slots will flow onto the face and serve moistening purposes.
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