View Poll Results: How many have a razor pass the hanging hair test ?
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Thread: Hanging hair
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05-15-2005, 08:22 AM #11
Originally Posted by Joe Lerch
Alternately, some will glide the razor about a quarter inch above the skin of the arm. Little hairs ought to fly everywhere. Sometimes you even hear little ping sounds as its doing its thing, if you have a full-hollow "singing" blade.
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05-15-2005, 03:36 PM #12
Thanks for the explanation, guys.
David, how often do you need to replace your badger brushes?
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05-16-2005, 05:37 AM #13
Originally Posted by Joe Lerch
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05-16-2005, 07:34 AM #14
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Thanked: 0David Uthe's hair thickness classifications
Thanks for posting that information David. I will have to do some experimenting with the different hair types you have listed. Could explain some of the mysteries I have been enjoying with razors that are "scalp hair cutting machines" but don't shave as well or as smoothly as I would have expected. While I can understand your reluctance to experiment with hair types from one's personal anatomy, I could certainly add some spice to dates or bar hopping when you explain to that new and special aquantance that you are a straight razor shaver, and to test a razor for sharpness, the only real body hair that approximates actual men's facial hair comes from......well, this is where the creative part comes in.
ink:
Bob
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05-16-2005, 07:46 AM #15
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Thanked: 2209Ouch !
Another market for Rogaine
Randolph Tuttle, a SRP Mentor for residents of Minnesota & western Wisconsin
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05-30-2005, 05:10 PM #16
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Thanked: 10Re: Hanging hair
Here's a twist on the hanging hair test. Whle talking to my barber about it a while back, he said he would use this method to proove his razor's sharpness. He would hold the hair in front of his mouth and just slightly in front of the blade edge and blow on the hair, thereby cutting the hair.
Bob Keyes, who does'nt use any hair test methods, except by shaving.
Originally Posted by RichZ
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05-30-2005, 05:39 PM #17
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Thanked: 10Hanging hair test performed.
Well, first you get a rope, then put 13 coils in it and, no wait a minute, I thought you were talking about hanging a rabbit. Seriously, the hanging hair test goes like this. With one hand you hold the razor with the cutting edge straight up towards the ceiling, or sky if'n your outside and it ain't rainin, then with the other hand you grasp a hair between the thumb and forefinger, if you still have one, and let about an inch protrude, (stick out) from your fingers and you bring the hair down over the blade edge, (try varrying speeds, ha ha) and hope it cuts the hair. Usually about the 1/4 to 1/2 inch from your thumb and finger, as mentioned in another post. Remember also, that hair from different sourses are of different thickness and coarsness. Very fine hair is very difficult to cut even with a very sharp edge, but if you can cut the hair, you probably are approaching honemeister status. Some honers just test the sharpness by shaving a small area on the hair of their arm, but the best method is generally consider to be, by actually shaving the face. That is also generally considered to be the old, "if it feels good" Clinton method, LOL.
Bob Keyes.
Originally Posted by joe lerch
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05-30-2005, 06:10 PM #18
OK, my razor passes the hair test, as well as body hair test. On the forearms, that is...
BUT, when doing the real test, shaving, something's not right... The blade is not "gliding" with ease, as someone described the shaving with true sharp razor. Actually, i have to press a lot harder than my shavette with DE blade. Is this the real stuff or???
I wonder if it might be my stropping technique? As i read in the barber book, no mather how well honed your razor is, it is not good without the propper stroping.
Grrr...
Thoes somebody here uses the stainlesssteel blade? Maybe you can reccomend me the right stroping ratio? 6 laps, 15, 35, it is all mixed up.
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05-31-2005, 10:35 PM #19
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Thanked: 0I think the ratio and number of repetitions in stropping is less important than stropping with a correct stroke. Lite pressure on the blade, spine ALWAYS touching the strop, especially when switching directions, and NEVER lift the spine off the leather at the end of the stroke - not even one centimeter. If my razor will not cut a hanging hair after I strop on leather, I strop on one of my fine linen strops for 8 to 12 strokes on each side of the blade. I then restrop on leather, and my razor will then cut a hanging hair with ease, unless the blade is really messed up for some reason. In that case, it would be back to honing on a stone, then repeating the stropping process.
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06-22-2005, 02:52 PM #20
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Thanked: 0I just bought a new razor (revisor) from David. He honed it before shipping it to me. I just tested it with a bristle from a boars head brush and one of my wifes hairs from her brush. It passed with both. I need to buy an E-bay special to learn to hone so I dont mess up a nice sharp razor.
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