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Thread: Am I seeing SRP wrong?
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02-16-2012, 04:21 PM #1
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- Aug 2009
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Thanked: 2Am I seeing SRP wrong?
Why is it that SRP isn't very helpful to beginners? Why is it frowned upon to learn to hone? It almost seems as if it is one giant advertizement to buy stuff, rather than to learn skills. It kinda makes me sad, because I don't remember it being as bad 2 years ago. I have never seen a forum that all the moderators/mentors have the same exact opinion on all subjects. Kinda makes you wonder who is doing the thinking. I know it must be bad, when I have received so many PM's from people scared to post their thoughts in public for fear of being banned. What's the deal?
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02-16-2012, 04:27 PM #2
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- Jan 2009
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- Stay away stalker!
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Thanked: 1262yes you are.
No one frowns upon any one learning to hone. In fact if there was a conspiracy to maximize sales for a few mystery vendors, it would be advantageous for everyone to buy as many hones as possible.
I think you will find people bend over backwards to help people too. Even when it is the same question they have answered 10000 times before.
There is a strong push for new shavers not learn to shave and hone at the same time. You know why? Because we were all new at one point too and made various mistakes. We know how difficult it can be and how different a shave ready razor and sharp knife are.
SRP is all about making the learning experience as easy as possible for people. No one has ever been banned for having a different opinion.
FYI. If there is a master vendor making a ton of SRP money, can I have some for all the time I have spent fixing stuff so we can keep the noobs down?
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The Following 15 Users Say Thank You to Slartibartfast For This Useful Post:
94Terp (02-23-2012), Alembic (02-16-2012), BanjoTom (02-16-2012), bulldog (02-18-2012), Catrentshaving (02-16-2012), Hirlau (02-16-2012), HNSB (02-16-2012), Jimbo (02-16-2012), Lynn (02-16-2012), lz6 (02-16-2012), MickR (02-16-2012), onimaru55 (02-17-2012), ScottGoodman (02-16-2012), Str8Shooter (02-16-2012), WillN (02-16-2012)
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02-16-2012, 04:34 PM #3
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- Sep 2011
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- The Philadelphian Suburbs
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Thanked: 30You have to remember there are tons of new shavers like me who have a lot of questions and try to master it too quickly...and that can get frustrating. The more experienced members here have made the same mistakes we do/did and they are just trying to help us do it right by advising us not to move too quickly. It is very helpful here for beginners, but your experience of non-helpfulness is pretty subjective...it's VERY difficult to help out beginners in an anonymous online setting, as successful shaving is highly tailored to individuals; what works me for doesn't work for you and honestly there's not much they can do except make suggestions to us that may or may not work. Some stuff you're going to need to figure out yourself, not because no one here wants to help, but because the help that can be given is limited.
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The Following User Says Thank You to U2Bono269 For This Useful Post:
MickR (02-16-2012)
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02-16-2012, 04:39 PM #4
Not helpful? There is so much information in this forum and the wiki for beginners. Maybe they advice not to try honing for beginners because there are already so much things that can go wrong (beard prep, stropping, lather, ....) that it would make things only more complicated then necessary? I was lucky to meet other straight razor shavers in a meeting two weeks in, learned a lot there and started honing the next day. Took a while to get it right even after seeing how it was done. I think for the most part people here are just trying to help others out. Those who really like to learn honing won't be stopped anyway, all of the people that I know hone there own razors. It's not that difficult.
have a nice shave, greets ron
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02-16-2012, 04:40 PM #5
- Join Date
- Apr 2011
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- Tempe, Arizona, United States
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- 824
Thanked: 94I agree that some mods are overly sensitive and will over react to anything that could be percieved as sales talk ie "that looks great I will take two " while others will happily join in and only remove flagrant violations. But overall I feel that the majority of people and mods here will go out of their way to shed light on your wet shaving concerns.
I think the whole honing thing just stems from people wanting to learn to run before they can walk. In the long run it will save more people from the frusteration of learning what a truly sharp edge feels like while learning what angles work best plus what pre shave treatment to use etc etc also it can save people from possibly destroying a beautiful classic blades.
I dont see an issue with learning to shave for a year(or whatever time is comfortable) before touching a stone.
all is IMHO so take for what its worth. Im just a wet shaver avoiding doing real work by looking at SRP until his boss catches him.....
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02-16-2012, 04:43 PM #6
I learned to hone by reading posts on SRP, tutorials in the SRP Wiki (now known as 'The Library') and from one on one conversations with members. Learned how to strop and to use a straight razor to shave on SRP as well. The info gained here and a lot of practice with a lot of razors picked up mostly from ebay. You generally reap the rewards based on what effort you put into whatever it is you're doing. How are you doing BTW ? You've been a member since 2009 and have 22 posts ? Were they to help newcomers ?
Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.
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02-16-2012, 04:45 PM #7
I think it is a sad day if that is how we are perceived by newcomers to this site.
As stated by Slart, there's a huge crowd in here trying their very best to help people out as much as they can.
For absolutely no other reason than to give back to the society that got themselves up and running with straight razor shaving.
The reasoning behind the advice to learn to shave first, then to hone, is IMHO pretty sound.
That said, I did quite the opposite, and have advised others that felt that was the way to go, to the best of my abilities, how they should go forward with that.
Learning both at the same time, did provide me with the usual frustrations and uncertainty that comes with it for most new starters.
For that reason, and no other, I try to give that experience back to the community.
And about the fear of being banned for having a view other than that of the mods, I really don't see that happening on SRP.
Believe you me, we mods are just as different between us as the regular members are
And to me, that is half the fun!Bjoernar
Um, all of them, any of them that have been in front of me over all these years....
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02-16-2012, 04:45 PM #8
- Join Date
- Aug 2009
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- 38
Thanked: 2Can you direct me to a thread that a mod/mentors tells a beginner "Go get a hone and give it a shot, I bet you get the hang of it pretty quick"? I highly doubt it.
I don't think I even need respond to the rest.
That is not the message I see in most responses. People will voice very valid thoughts and ideas, only to be shot down in a very rude fashion. HHT anyone?
I think they go further than advising against it, most will damn you to a hot place for thinking this.
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02-16-2012, 04:53 PM #9
I have found SRP to be extremely helpful to new members who are just starting out. Learning to shave with a straight and proper stropping technique takes some time to master. Honing takes even longer to learn. I think the reason the common advice about new members not rushing out to buy hones is sage advice, what if the new member who is so eager to try this and sinks alot of cash into razors, strops, creams/soaps, hones, and etc only to then experience less than stellar shaves in the beginning that they end up frustrated and go back to a disposable?
Case in point, about a year or so ago, there was a new member who purchased everything right at the start not heeding the advice of the experienced members. After maybe a couple of months, decided learning to shave with a straight razor, strop, and hone was too much of a time investment. He ended up selling the whole kit and kaboodle in the classifieds...for a loss. If I had been quicker on the keyboard, I would have bought his gear because it was a steal. That guy is out some serious dough.
As for the fear of being banned for posting a difference of opinion in public, have you spent anytime lately in the "Conversation" forum? There is a huge swath of opinions being posted. No one is being banned because those involved are behaving as gentlemen and not making issues personal. Sure, the mods may need to step in from time to time and give warnings or even close threads that derail, but I have seen no evidence of the members involved being banned because they may subscribe to a different thought process. Just my opinion though.Why doesn't the taco truck drive around the neighborhood selling tacos & margaritas???
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02-16-2012, 05:02 PM #10
Yes you are.
This is a very helpful forum. Honing is just a bit difficult to start off with. If you can manage to find more experienced local members you can start learning hands on. There is a search engine on the site for a reason. Have fun!
BTW. Learning how to hone is half the fun! ;D