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06-30-2007, 04:38 PM #1
These days, I don't have the skipping and chattering issues that I experienced the first few times I str8 shaved. And that was with a blade that was honed by an SRP recognized "honing guy". I attribute that to blade angle and direction (ie technique). I am able to get my razors reasonably sharp on the hone (can pass the HHT and they feel sharp and smooth on the face - not like the first time I honed a blade LOL)
Is it still technique or sharpness or blade style???
Thanks
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06-30-2007, 04:47 PM #2
Probably a bit of all three but maybe not in that order. most likely in this order.
Sharpness
Blade Style
Technique
I'm assuming that your technique has come up enough to make it a minor issue.
X
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06-30-2007, 05:26 PM #3
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- Aug 2006
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- 882
Thanked: 108X is probably right (usually is). But I think when it comes to the chin and neck, technique is highly individual and harder to transmit in an online forum. Everything I know about honing, stropping, and basic shaving technique I learned from this forum. (X gave a technique for ATG in the mustache area – works great and I still use it). Ask a question you get an answer that 9 times out of 10 solves the problem.
Not so with the chin and neck, however, in my experience. There it's just trial and error, lots of red spots, and finally an epiphany or two that no one else could have led you to. I finally found a 30-degree south-by-southwest sloping XTG stroke from my right cheek to the middle of my chin that somehow shaves closer than a ATG stroke in that area and causes no razor burn. It doesn't work on the other side; there I have to dry a spot to the left of the matching area, pull the skin much more taut than usual and do a single ATG stroke. Similarly, I've found that an inch-wide band of growth at the lower part of my neck has a subtly different grain from the rest, and that if I start with a S-N pass just on that band, then do N-S for the rest of the neck area, I don't get any spots. No way is this shit the same for anyone else. The grain and whorl of the hair around the mouth and neck is just too idiosyncratic from person-to person, so even if your technique is very very good you might have a little more yet to learn about your face.
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06-30-2007, 10:02 PM #4
Well X certainly deserves alot of credit but don't give him too much or he'll just get a swelled head around here.
I think sharpness is number one because no matter the technique or blade type dull is dull. I think technique is number two, remember an experience race car driver in a VW Beattle could drive the trousers off some novice in a ferrari. I would put blade type as number 3. Much of the difference in shave quality is more a matter of the characteristics of certain grinds and weights of the blades which in experienced hands can be an advantage or disadvantage. To me different grinds are just differences in feel in the end they all shave the same.No matter how many men you kill you can't kill your successor-Emperor Nero
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06-30-2007, 10:09 PM #5
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07-01-2007, 03:33 AM #6
- Join Date
- May 2005
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- Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States
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Thanked: 2209Well... your Wapi is a wedge and some refer to it a single concave 1/4 hollow. The point is that it is a stiff grind with little flex. Some people with heavy/tough/wirey/problem beards prefer the stiffer grinds such as wedge, 1/4 hollow.l/2 hollow, either single concave or biconcave. I am one of those guys.
I do agree that sharpness is the most important characteristic but I will not say that a 5/8 full hollow grind will shave a thick-tough-wirey beard as well as a stiffer grind. That is something that each person has to decide for themselves. Judge for yourself.
There are two things that make a big difference in my shaves
1. Beard prep
2. Patience
Just my two cents,Randolph Tuttle, a SRP Mentor for residents of Minnesota & western Wisconsin
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07-01-2007, 04:51 PM #7
Thanks to all for the input!
Randy,
I had my suspicions that the Wapi was not a full hollow and that that fact had some relevance in the shave for me. Sure, sharpness and technique (experience and expertise) have an overwhelming effect on the shave. I sure as hell noticed it when I first tried honing the Morley and dulled the bejeeeses out of itOnce I figured out how to hone it up again and was passing the HHT and all. I received the Wapi and honed it as well, my technique had not changed between the next two shaves, just the razor from the Morley FH to the Wapi. I will say that the Wapi steel on the hone feels much different than the Morley Solingen steel does. Could be the grind, but the steel feels softer somehow
. But the shaves are better, too.