Christian,
rest assure, you are not alone with criticizing this contest/survey idea.
I'm not one to take such things personal, and your thoughts, as well as those of mr. Bigspendur, who also shared his disapproval, are approached with honest consideration.
However, I think we fundamentally disagree on the nature of the concept "shaveability". I, for one, think that "shaveability" is a fairly objective notion. I draw such conclusion, based upon razors I have swapped and shared with others, for comparison and assessment. I also base my ideas on a long chat with a retired barber that shaved 1000's of beards between 1940 and the mid 1960's. For that purpose the clients personal straight razors were kept and maintained at the barbershop, all with the same means and with the same concept about a blade being up to par or not.
In my opinion, an superior straight razor's edge shaves close. Sharpness of a blade is, again in my opinion, directly correlated to the closeness of the shave, and I can generally form myself an idea of sharpness if I pay attention to how close the first pass WTG cuts the whiskers. Going ATG tells me more, because a good edge shaves completely smooth, while a lesses edge leaves stubble, no matter what. I think that relation between sharpness and closeness is the same on all faces, and I also think the variance is much lesser than what is often suggested.
As a second criterion, a superior straight razor's edge also lasts a fair number of shaves. The way we plan to assess the razors with multiple shaves by 4 jury members, will put some weight on that as well.
Hence, while you seem convinced that the shaving performance of an edge (remember that everybody will be using the same type and brand of razor) is a very subjective notion, I am convinced of almost the opposite.
I also think that we will find experienced jury members, so that stropping malpractice is not an issue. It's a typical newbie occurrence, and I don't think experienced shavers dull their blades on a strop, ever.
I would like to emphasize, once again, the idea is hone a razor and find out how 4 experienced shavers rate its performance. For kicks, the best blade wins a price. It's not about the best honer, but about the blade that receives the best appraisal during a blind assessment.
The ones that try to organize this thing have no choice but to take this seriously, for the sake of being as objective as reasonably possible, and because a participation fee needs to be involved, to pay for the razor and the postage costs. (current price for the DA's is $9.50)
But those who think about participating should really not take things too seriously. Just a game, a nice prize pot, and a way to have a razor assessed by some fine gentlemen. Surely not something to have your ego bruised about.
Bart.