h a l f b a k e r yYour journey of inspiration and perplexement provides a certain dark frisson.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
I like to shave after taking a shower. It makes it easier to do it immediately after because I'm already in there, and my face is already wet, plus it means I don't have to worry about forgetting to do it later.
Problem is, the mirror is always fogged up so I can't see clearly enough to get as perfect
a
shave as I like, and even wiping it with a towel doesn't help. The cieling vent doesn't help much, either.
So I've been thinking, why not have a defroster for the mirror, that works just like a car's windshield defroster? 2 hot-air blowers, one each above and below the mirror. Turn them on before getting in the shower and they'll keep the mirror from fogging up. Even if they don't work perfecly, as soon as the shower is turned off and stops pumping out more heat and humidity they should clear the mirror in a matter of seconds.
Sort of Baked
http://www.plumbing...m/clearmirrors.html A mirror heater [tastycat, Nov 28 2006]
The Mirror I Mist
http://www.halfbake...20Mirror_20I_20Mist reminds me of this idea by FarmerJohn [xaviergisz, Nov 28 2006]
Sharper Image Fog-free mirror
http://www.sharperi.../product/sku__SE394 Granted this is a new mirror, not solving the problem with an existing installed mirror. [craigts, Nov 29 2006]
Please log in.
If you're not logged in,
you can see what this page
looks like, but you will
not be able to add anything.
Annotation:
|
|
The problem has been solved, not the way you suggest, but by heating the mirror.
|
|
|
I suggested a squeegee on the other
side of your comb, but I had a tragic
typo on "comb" and the idea was kind
of lost in the shuffle. |
|
|
There's at least one difference in application between my idea and the electric heater in the first link. With mine, one can simply tilt the blowers and you have a convenient, hands-free hairdrier! |
|
|
Take a bar of soap and draw a little in the middle of the mirror, now use a wash cloth to wipe the soap around. Poof! no fog. It does "wear off" with a lot of condensation, but it lasts quite a while, and you can always re-apply. |
|
|
When we would go snorkeling as kids we learned that spitting in your mask and rubbing it around the glass would keep it from fogging up. Don't know about spitting on the bathroom mirror though. Not good for hygiene.
|
|
|
In the bathroom, just hit the mirror with a hairdryer for about 20 seconds. |
|
|
I'm a guy and I keep my hair short. I don't have a hairdrier, nor would I be caught dead in public buying one. |
|
|
just stop shaving and trimming a beard is faster |
|
|
I recently lived in an apartment with a poor ventilation fan, and so i used my built-in-stand-hairdryer to heat my mirror, just as u suggest. The problem is that when u introduce the heat in a small room like a bathroom, the place gets hot, quick. So, the foggy mirror does get fixed, but the whole area gets really hot, and thats even on the lowest setting. If the mirror has two such heat blowers, it would probably be even worse.
|
|
|
I guess in the long-term, purchasing new no-fog mirrors work, but in the short term, retrofitting windshield washer-like fins, or maybe some sort of adhesive heat grid, like that on car rear windows. |
|
|
Quest I think this is great, but I do offer one idea. Clean out your ceiling vent, it did wonders for my fogging mirror. Bun btw. |
|
| |