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Thread: Real or fake
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04-28-2011, 01:32 PM #1
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Thanked: 1371Razorfaker guy 1: "Build me a fake razor. Pay meticulous attention to detail. The pins, the box, even the paperwork have to look exactly right."
Razorfaker guy 2: "What about the bearing washers?"
Razorfaker guy 1: "Oh... Don't worry about those. Just make sure you get everything else juuust right."
Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
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MikeMN (04-28-2011)
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04-28-2011, 01:53 PM #2
+1. Going to the expense of printing up paperwork, boxes, scales with the inlaid Friodur ...... the etch that is on the blade and doing the hollow grind. I couldn't imagine that it would be a fake. If I was going to do something like that it would be making fake wonderedges, reapers, and fillys. Like Willie Sutton said (google him) when the judge asked him why he robbed banks, "Cause thats where the money is."
Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.
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MikeMN (04-28-2011)
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04-28-2011, 02:50 PM #3
Yea, this comes up every now and then. So far no one has encountered a counterfeit. It's not something I would be worrying about. The day it happens will be the day either straight shaving or collecting goes mainstream.
No matter how many men you kill you can't kill your successor-Emperor Nero
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MikeMN (04-28-2011)
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04-28-2011, 03:04 PM #4
This is the best point made so far. While I loved reading all of the responses, and think you all made good points, some of the points on counterfeiting were naive, in general, though possibly dead on in regard to straight razors. For example, while poorly done instructions is a dead give away for counterfeiting, copying instructions accurately is easier than copying an integrated circuit, and integrated circuits are counterfeited.
As for going into business under their own Chinese (or other country) brand is the logical thing to do, building a brand reputation costs time and money, and is an uphill battle. I know some Chinese brands that are attempting this in the west, with shoes and pianos as two examples, but it is a slow process.
Don't take this wrong, I am glad the photos are passing the smell test among my seniors here at srp. I don't plan to sell the razor--I plan to have it honed and see how it shaves. If it shaves well, whether or not it is counterfeit will be irrelevant.