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Ceramic razor

Replace once a year or so
  (+4, -1)
(+4, -1)
  [vote for,
against]

How about some guerrillas develop a ceramic safety razor, and put one over on Gillette and Co.? Ceramic holds an edge about 30-50X longer than steel, and you wouldn't have to worry about the brittleness as much, as it's only a 1-inch blade instead of an 8-inch Kyocera chef's knife.

[edit] PeterSealy- the Kyocera razors cut the skin because they're using a chisel grind, which is fine for steel but too sharp for ceramic, hence it "bites." This can be fixed by changing the grind and using a razor design more like a surgical prep razor.

I stand by my idea. I don't enjoy paying $3/blade for my Mach3.

Witch Doctor, Jan 27 2002

Diamond-coated blades http://boston.bizjo.../06/14/daily36.html
[bpilot, Oct 22 2004]


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Annotation:







       Ooooh! [UB], a cutting remark.
bristolz, Jan 27 2002
  

       Now there exists technology to deposit a thin film of diamond on various substrates. Too expensive so far for consumer products, but why stop at ceramics? Deposit a diamond film on, say, titanium nitride coated steel, etch away the steel and you might get a blade thin enough to be slightly flexible despite the extreme hardness.   

       Some microtomes already use diamond knives. Microtome knives of any kind, including steel, are the scariest sharp things I've ever worked with. They are basically super-razors.
TD3, Oct 22 2004
  

       Actually, [TD3], Gillette coats the Mach3 with diamond-like carbon (DLC), and now Schick has a product with it as well. (See link). The New Yorker had a surprisingly interesting article about the development and launch of the Mach3. I never could understand why Gillette didn't promote the diamond coating more.
bpilot, Oct 22 2004
  

       Do you one better.   

       Cryogenically freeze the razor and DLC coat it. The carbides rise to the surface during freezing and create a great rough carbon surface for the amorphous diamond molecules to adhere to.
danheathmoore, Dec 07 2007
  

       I always chuck my multi-bladed disposable heads long before the sharpness wears off. it's impossible to clean out the crap in between the blades. It's $6 a blade in new zealand for the schick version. This means it's basically $6 a shave unless I want to spend 20 minutes trying to wash the goddam head.   

       I think a better idea is to revert to the old-style double-headed disposable razors (the kind vampires cut their tongues with), but create a razor head that can hold multiple double-headed razors. Maybe three. A switch on the side will rotate them so that either one side or the other is angled properly for shaving. And when it is full oc rap, pop the top off, wash each blade individually, and put them back in. Those double-headed razors are cheap anyhow. if they were made out of ceramic all the better, though i like somewhat bendy razors when i'm using razors for non-shaving tasks.   

       [edit] Additionally you could create a small 'razor clean-n-sharp' gizmo that sucks in dull grimy double-headed razors, and polishes and steel-sharpens the edges before spitting them out the other side.   

       Thus your razors can last you for a long, long time.
mylodon, Dec 07 2007
  


 

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