Originally Posted by
edk442
I'm a student and heres some quick figures from my standpoint: (this is all Canadian prices)
The cheapest razors I can find are these packs of 10 Gillette CustomPlus for $6.62 from Wal-Mart (taxes included). Now let's assume you shave everyday, so each razor lasts about a week (7 shaves a week, or 5 shaves and take the weekend off). So in a year you'll go through about 5 of these packs (52 weeks/10 weeks worth of shavers per pack) forget about the extra 2 weeks, let's just say you get lazy every once in a while.
The cheapest shave foam (and frankly quite good compared to the Gillette shit) I can find is a can of Barbasol for $1.77 (taxes included) also from Wal-Mart. It lasts me a little longer than a pack of the cheap razors will, maybe about 13 weeks, so you'll need about 4 cans in a year.
So 5 x $6.62 = $33.10/year for razors; 4 x $1.77 = 7.08
Grand total of $40.18 for a years worth of the most unsatisfying shaves imaginable.
I'm 20 now, so let's say conservatively, I have another 50 years of shaving ahead of me.
50 x $40.18 = $2009.00
Now thats a fair sized amount of cash, and what would I have to show for it...not a damn thing! Relentless razor burn and ingrown hairs...no wonder a lot of old men are cranky!
And this is the lower limit of what you'd probably spend on shaving with disposables. Don't even get me started on if you use a Mach3 or Fusion or whatever contraption torture device they think of next.
Even with a moderate case of RAD you can still come out ahead of the game, and then at least you'll have something you can hold and be proud of and pass on. Truly more worthwhile. (or you can sell it and regain some of your costs less the price of soap)
The only problem is that the price has more of a impact with straights. Hones, strops, paddles, razors. Even a cheap setup will give some sticker shock. Even though they about balance out in the end, straights make you more aware of how much you truly spend on shaving.