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Originally Posted by
English
Hey Guys, stop and hold fire for a minute,
If you won't send it back to DOVO, you don't have a leg to stand on. DOVO need to see the problem to respond. Common sense.
Think about it.
The truth is that the distributor who sold it to you should offer this service and offer a replacement. The postal problem is the distributors , not yours. They sold you the razor, not DOVO and they need to own up. Not only this, if the razor was pre sharpened by the distributor, they are responsible for the edge you received and not DOVO.
If the distributor won't do this, then that distributor is not reputable. If that is the case please tell us that fact so we can make sure we don't purchase from them in the future.
Speak directly to the people who sold you the razor and let them do the job for which they are paid by both you and DOVO.
But if you meddled with the razor, it's your fault and be prepared if this is the case. We who deal with razors on a daily basis know when someone has been meddling. Believe me, it's not difficult to tell.
Neither is it difficult for DOVO to tell.
I sent Dovo the pics of my blade and of my proceedure to establish that the blade was warped (precision granite plate certified to 2um flatness).
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I also wanted to let you know the method I used to determine that the blades were warped, it may help when discussing issues with the manufacturing/QC department, as I know there can be many variables (a hone that is not lapped correctly, etc..). It only took me about 30 seconds to determine that razors 2& 3 were curved, as I knew what I was looking for at that point. The first razor I spent 30 minutes trying to hone before I finally took a look under the microscope and saw that there was something not right with the razor (I'm an engineer...)
I have a precision flat granite plate, certified flat to 2 microns accuracy (see attached pics), I mount a sheet of diamond lapping film (3um grit) to the granite plate. I put a line of marker pen down the edge of the razor and then give a few passes over the lapping film. In the third attached picture it can be clearly seen that material is being removed only at the toe and heel of the razor, the main portion of the blade is not making contact with the hone at all.
On the other side of the blade, the reverse is true: it makes contact only in the middle, and not at the ends. While contact only in the middle is usually indicative of a "smiling" razor, the fact that the other side of the razor makes contact only at the ends shows that it is curved lengthwise.
All three of the razors were curved exactly the same. The side of the blade without the gold wash & etching was the side that made contact only at toe & heel.
I would encourage your QC department to employ some sort of test such as this to determine blade flatness prior to shipment. The precision plate cost me $20, and the test only took me about 30 seconds to complete. The fact that the three razors all were curved in exactly the same manner would seem to also indicate a possible tooling error, or something that is causing repetitive defects, not just random errors.