Retiring a razor

Edited 2017-05-26

Some razors do, to be polite about it, age less well than others. But when it’s a razor that cost me slightly less than 3 US dollars to begin with, a five year service life really isn’t bad at all… it’s all of 60 cents a year.

When new, the Yuma was shiny, full of promises and very, very cheap.

I must say the Yuma – a cheaply made razor with a hollow handle and paper-thin head all made from “who knows what fell into the pot” zinc alloy – has given remarkable good shaves, wear, tear and oxidation have eaten away the molecule thick “chrome” coating. This means that while the razor is technically usable, it simply don’t glide across my manly cheeks with any degree of ease any longer… the whole surface is covered in zinc oxide which is used as an industrial abrasive, in effect the opposite of what you’ll want for smooth shaves.

I guess I could ship my Yuma out to be replated by the professionals, possible in something more fancy than plain chrome… but it’s not worth doing that with something that is so cheap and cheerful. So I guess it’s time to put it back in it’s presentation box, put it on the shelf and look for a replacement in my rotation.

Update: Over on my favorite shaving forum a fellow gentleman pointed out that the Yuma might be made from aluminium alloy, rather than the zinc alloy I have been assuming for years. If it is aluminium it’s some of the least quality alloy of it I’ve seen… but that would mean that I could – in theory – repolish the head and get back the original shiny finish. I might give that a go at some point, just for fun.

A very interesting read

A few years ago Brian Krampert – the man who makes one of my favourite aftershaves – posted an in depth history of the Valet Autostrop; a razor I consider to have one of the more steam-punky looks of them all.

If you haven’t read it already, I strongly recommend going and doing it now – it’s a very interesting read.

New arrival in the den

An interesting read – a review of the Paradigm Razor

Remember my rant from a couple of days ago?

A trusted source – ie: a wetshaver whos integrity and common sense I trust, even if I do on occation disagree with his conclusions – have done a review on the Paradigm Razor.

Among several interesting tidbits is high praise for the design – the use of a bar instead of pins to lick the blade is pointed out – as well as praise for the shave (after a little bit of adjustment due to the low weight). The difficulty of machining Ti is also pointed out.

You can do a lot worse the next five minutes than to pop over to the Sharpologist and read the review. And once you’ve done that, you can find even more reviews of the Paradigm over on my favourite shave forum.

The worst kind of shilling?

Updated 28th April

There are a couple of things about this hobby that ticks me off… the big one is not unique to wetshaving; shilling. Not to point fingers or mention names, but there is a couple of vendors who either condones or outright encourages shilling – which is bad enough when they use it to shill their own products, but worse when they use it to talk down, belittle or attack the products of others.

Okay, a little back story: A little while ago a new razor manufacturer popped onto the scene, offering something as uncommon (but not unheard of) as a fully machined Titanium razor. Not as cheap as most razors at just shy of 400, but not expensive either all things considered.

For those who don’t know, machining Ti is… well, difficult don’t quite cover it. It requires skill, longer time to machine, frequent replacement of cutting tools, and so on. It’s notoriously hard on tools due it’s high strength, elasticity, and poor thermal conductivity. An online source I trust points out that a lot of shops won’t machine titanium because of the high costs and wear on tooling. So not only is the base metal costlier than more common materials like steel or aluminium (not to mention zamak and potmetals), but it’s also costlier to turn into a complex shape like a razor head – not to mention a tapered, hexagonal razor handle with engraved chevrons. If you also factor in that the razor is manufactured in a first world nation where you’ll have to pay your machinist a decent wage, 400 frankly sound downright sensible – it’s not far from razors such as the OneBlade, which have gotten near universal acclaim.

I personally have some minor experience in forming, shaping and drilling Ti in sheet form, and even the simple work I did required a whole day (and a fresh piece of sheet metal after I bungled the first). The skill and patience to actually machine it is beyond me – and I strongly suspect beyond most people.

Which is part of the reason why quite frankly got quite pissed when I decided to look for some information on the Paradigm in order to make a tiny blurb on the blog about how someone was making a  razor the hard way – as mentioned machining Ti is hard – and found something else on the first page of the search result.

Lets have a look shall we?

For those that see but don’t see it: Multiple threads across multiple forums, all started by users with different usernames – but with pretty much the exact same title and identical punctuation? Add to that the factoid that all the thread starters attack the prize of the razor, yet none states to have tried it.

I don’t know about you, but to me something smells more than a little off… it’s pretty much the exact pattern you’ll see when someone is shilling, but used to attack a very interesting razor (sadly outside my budget) and a brand new manufacturer.

As a fellow shaver and gentleman stated in one of those threads: “For some people , Titanium is not worth the price that is being asked for these days and for others would be their objects of desire.” Does the fact that you don’t want to pay the asking price for a razor mean that you’ll have to try to talk it down? I don’t see many people shit-talking the price of a Porce claiming that it shouldn’t cost that much to make, nor many scooter drivers shit-talking Harley-Daveson for selling expensive motorcycles.

Overall one have to wonder why there seem to be a drive to talk down a new, promising manufacturer who choose the difficult way to break into the market. Did Paradigm steal some ones thunder by releasing a Ti razor? Is someone out there feeling a bit of pressure and want to get rid of competition? Or is it plain pettiness? Hard to say, but either way it’s not a gentlemanly thing to do.

People makes me angry at times. This is one of those times.

More Twin injector information

I have found some references to being able to use the Schick Twin with normal injector blades, but not more than one… on some images online the twin blade looks to be made of two blades that each are thinner than the normal blade… the resulting double blade seems to be a little wider and thicker than a modern single.

A modern single blade in an E2 injector.

A Schick Twin blade in the same razor – same razor and blade as the second to last image in last Thursdays post.

It is also interesting to see the ‘naked’ blade compared to normal injector blades (modern blade on the left and an original on the right); slightly staggered, and with cut-outs to allow cleaning.

I’m finding several fleaBay auctions for Twin blades, but most of them looks like NOS from late 80s or early 90s… plenty with Japanese or possible Chinese labelling that may be more recent though, hard to tell.

Twinjector?

Found these while I was looking for pictures for Tuesday’s post:

Twinjectors is something I’ve never heard about… but they must clearly have been a thing, and as far as I can tell they came out at about the same time as first twin blade cartridges – but they don’t seem to have been on the market for very long. Even my favorite shvaing forum – the Shave Nook – only have a single post even mentioning the Twinjector; a want-to-buy post from 2013.

A few more pictures I found while digging for more information:

As often happens, Gillette was not alone in making injectors for twin blades. Both Persona and Schick made them as well in the same time frame, and they seem to have sunk into the murky depths of time without leaving much behind as well.
The Personna Injectore II:

The Schick Injector Twin:

I suspect the various twin blade injectors were plagued by the same fault as most multiblade carts; clogging between the blades…

All in all an interesting little oddity that I’m happy I stumbled across in my meandering trek across the internet.

Let me inject some old advertisments

Stay moist shave…

…with a used blade and cold water. Sounds good, apart from the danger of soap poisoning…

German WW2 military shave kit

This is, according to the sources online, an original German Wehrmacht standard issue shavekit. Goes one better than the US Gillette Khaki kit from WW1 by including brush and soap, but  the round mirror seems less useful than a rectangular one.