How about this? In the UK too.
http://stevewoodheadceramics.co.uk/i...g-scuttle.html
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How about this? In the UK too.
http://stevewoodheadceramics.co.uk/i...g-scuttle.html
I had a look at the Steve wood head one but on his website it says "keeps the lather warm for at least 10 minutes"; I take significantly longer than that hehe. From what people say the German one keeps hottest the longest due to the material its made from which was the deciding factor for me :) if anyone is going to over engineer a product its going to be the Germans ;)
I use the #3 Largest Woodhead scuttle which keeps my lather warm for about 45 minutes. The bigger the heat sink (water volume and scuttle mass) the longer the lather stays warm. (Slower it cools). The Schwartzsweisskeramic is very well spoken on the forum threads. It is mostly a matter of physics.
My Woodhead scuttle and soap dish combo were acquired from the classifieds. I am confident that I would also have been satisfied by a large Schwartzweisskeramic, if it had been the product being offered for sale.
That's from tap water alone. None of them work well from just tap water. If you use boiling water to pre-heat any scuttle you will be fine.
That being said, I'd go with the larger one which has a higher water capacity
I thought about using my scuttle with boiling water, but I was concerned about the potential effects from thermal shock.
Has anyone experienced a crack due to heating a GP scuttle from boiling water?
A well made scuttle should be able to take boiling water.
Classicedge.ca sells scuttles and their instruction is to fill it with hot tap water, then dump it and replace with boiling water.
http://classicedge.ca/index.php?rout...product_id=708