(08-12-2016, 01:04 AM)grim Wrote: 1. You cannot get an irritation free and BBS shave from a cartridge.
Nonsense. I can. Just as wyze0ne doesn't need pre-shave prep, broad over reaching statements are also ridiculous. Never say never.
2. Using an alcohol based after shave is good for you.
Maybe in 1965 when nothing else was available but this isn't 1965 anymore. It should be intuitively obvious to anyone that willingly taking a masochist approach and slapping on the burn, when soothing balms exist that also take care of nicks, would be masochistic and unnecessary and intuitively NOT good for you when alternatives exist. Few people willingly give themselves pain.
3. Canned shaving cream, or as used in the virtual community as the derogatory term "canned goo" is the evil spawn of the devil.
If this were true, then the millions upon millions of people who have been using it since the early 1950s would be dead from it. Find 10 cases of anyone dying or falling sick from using canned shaving cream.
4. Chubby brushes and stiff backbones is the defacto standard. Floppy brushes are poor and to be avoided.
Nonsense. I have a very floppy brush and it works great for creams. In fact, it works on everything.
5. Nobody need buy any shaving soap more expensive than (fill in your choice (e.g., arko, CO bigelow, Williams).
ROFL. The same can be said of Edge then.
6. The Razor industry, all kinds, is booming in the US
FALSE. Annual growth from 2011 to 2016 is (-.9%)
7. Canned Shaving Cream (aka goo) is the most popular shaving cream sold in the US
FALSE. Gel is the most popular.
8. "Shaving" is more popular than ever.
FALSE. Its flatlined since 2011 hurt by things like casual Friday and the ever popular three day stubble.
9. Disposable razors are a dying breed.
FALSE. Sales jumped $23M https://www.creditdonkey.com/shaving-statistics.html
10. Cartridge razors simple pieces of plastic easy to make.
FALSE http://www.esquire.co.uk/culture/news/a6833/razors
"[Gillete] spent around $750m in research and development costs [for the profusion]
it represents the very apex of precision engineering and medical know-how, literally cutting-edge science. Take Gillette's Fusion ProGlide Power Razor. It contains more than 60 different parts. It's so complicated there's only two factories in the world that can make it. Each of its six blades are spot-welded 13 times – that's 78 welds per cartridge. (Gillette does more welding than many car manufacturers.) Those six blades are now so thin – far thinner than, say, a surgeon's scalpel – that scientists have to examine them using atomic microscopes, the same ones Nasa uses. At their tips, they measure 25 nanometers, a figure that's smaller than the wave of visible light.
11. Edge thickness of a DE blade is smaller than a cartridge blade (not discussing the angle or hardness)
See article above. cartridge blade is 25 nm. See http://www.bushcraftuk.com/downloads/pdf...shexps.pdf Gillette DE blade .35 microns or 350 nm
Or this could all be nonsense.
Man, I feel somewhat depressed after reading your post.
It reminds me of the day when I found out that Santa was not real.