Comment on Tuesday SOTD Thread - April 30th, 2024
gcgallant@sub.wetshaving.social 8 months agoHappy Birthday!!
I think that Mäurer and Wirtz will have spent quite a bit of time on this new base to protect their market. I figure that with a bit of dialing in, we’ll all be happy with it someday.
So, what’s your take on your second big Frio? Beautiful, btw.
djundjila@sub.wetshaving.social 8 months ago
Thanks!
I bet you’re right.
This one’s great! Where discussed already at dinner point that these modern Frios don’t have a good reputation, but this one’s just fantastic. Absolutely zero complaints.
I wrote up a comparison to the 14s during last TabOKtoberfest.
gcgallant@sub.wetshaving.social 8 months ago
Ah yes. I remember your excellent comparison.
I made a video about this, but I think perhaps some of the negative opinion on stainless razors comes from trying to treat stainless steel like carbon steel. As you know, I inspect edges and test them with a pretty high level of OCD. If you sharpen stainless with synthetic stones (Al~2~O~3~ abrasive) most stainless edges can be refined to the same keenness as carbon. In my view, when this is done, they perform as well also.
djundjila@sub.wetshaving.social 8 months ago
To my surprise, I haven’t fallen into the natural stone rabbit hole (yet), so I’ve never really seen that issue with stainless steel razors. Your suggestion sounds plausible.
I’m thinking it could also just be a question of timing. The heyday of straight razor use is just before the era of high quality affordable stainless steel. All the legendary straights that were mass produced are carbon steel, and there’s only a handful of manufacturers who survived until the stainless steel era.
gcgallant@sub.wetshaving.social 8 months ago
Refinement on a natural stone tends to be slower, and the stones, themselves, are inconsistent. The feel can be marvelous, and the natural stone scratch patterns will impart a different feel to the edge. Definitely fun to play with, but time consuming. Also, and most relevant to stainless, is that while all of the natural abrasives have Mohs hardness that is greater than stainless steel as a material, not all the abrasives have Mohs hardness greater than the chromium carbides within the metal matrix. Aluminum oxide, OTOH, does.