Aaahhh that sound. There's no better musical score than that to start up a new day!
It depends if it was sharp or keen. Lol.Which begs the question, If a whisker falls and makes no sound was it actually cut?
Time for a new classification. There was bbs. Now we need to.judge the edge by the audible feedback on an audio scope. Lol. It can be another study of useless parameters we are always looking for. We can study it, analyze the data, argue about it then realize that it was a waste of time. But it all adds to the flavor. Lol. Maybe instead of a blind test we can do a deaf test.
Which begs the question, If a whisker falls and makes no sound was it actually cut?
Of course our faces are just play doh fun factories extruding a never ending whisker. This forum engages in the study of its removal.Is the whisker you cut tomorrow the same whisker as the whisker you just cut today...
I can't speak for anyone else's shaving experience, but when I'm shaving with a full hollow, they don't sound like scrapers running over sandpaper. I actually do pay very close attention to the audible feedback and how it's reproduced in camera, post editing and on which device. A full hollow that I've honed and shaved with will most definitely make a different sound than one of my wedges. But, During the shave, the sound is not at all like 'scraping' and it's usually pretty quiet and a lot softer sounding.