After shaving and rinsing everything off, I flip my blade over for the next shave so that I'm using the other side of the edge. Does this really do anything, or is it just a useless habit? And is there anyone else who does this?
After shaving and rinsing everything off, I flip my blade over for the next shave so that I'm using the other side of the edge. Does this really do anything, or is it just a useless habit? And is there anyone else who does this?
Can't help, either. Just like John said, you use both bevels of the edge to shave, no matter which way the blade is flipped.
It's equivalent to this: Suppose you're cutting a piece of meat on a cutting board with a kitchen knife. You cut a couple of slices, and then you walk around to the other side of the kitchen island to cut the next couple of slices.
You're still using the same knife with the same cutting edge. Walking around the island doesn't accomplish anything.
No, you do use both sides when shaving. To kind of "marry" the meat cutting example with the concept of shaving:I guess I didn't make myself clear in that it is as Dirtdog noticed; only one side of the edge is actually being used in any given shave.
WITH THE MEAT EXAMPLE AREN'T YOU CUTTING USING BOTH SIDE OF THE KNIFES EDGE ?
WHEN YOU SHAVE AREN'T YOU USING ONE SIDE OF THE RAZOR BLADES EDGE ?
You are in fact scraping hairs off not cutting them so to speak
sorry cap lock
What other edge?? What is cutting is the 'border' of the two bevels coming together; whether you flip it or not makes no difference since it is still the same 'cutting-line' you are using.
WITH THE MEAT EXAMPLE AREN'T YOU CUTTING USING BOTH SIDE OF THE KNIFES EDGE ?
No, you are not. You are using both sides of the razor's edge, just like the kitchen knife.WHEN YOU SHAVE AREN'T YOU USING ONE SIDE OF THE RAZOR BLADES EDGE ?
Can't hurt anything.
An 'edge' is the intersection of 2 planes at an angle (aka "bevel"), it doesn't have any dimension of it's own. Whether plane A is up and plane B down or vice versa doesn't change anything.
It seems to me that since one side of the blade rubs your face, that turning them might have some minor affect, but I would not do it, both because of the hassle, and the increased possibility of cut fingers.
When you consider the relative inexpense of DE blades, whether turning a blade has any benefit or not, I wouldn't think it was worth the bother.
David
It is not the side that is cutting; actually it shouldn't really rub your face either since it is a 'freefall' for the cutting edge.
Try to see it this way; the only importance of the entire DE blade is to form two '1-dimensional' lines on either side of the blade, just the last molecules on them. There is just one of those lines on either side and flipping your blade wouldn't show a new cutting line, just reverse the blade forming that line.