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It's not dirt so much as the residue from all that soap! I think they benefit from a good clean every once in a while.
It's not dirt so much as the residue from all that soap! I think they benefit from a good clean every once in a while.
Hey i thought it had its own self cleaning systemIt spends its whole working life covered in soap, how dirty can it get?
Yeah your right the number one killer of badger brushes is soap residue at the base of the hairs, it clings to the base of the hair and makes the hair brittle and fragile, the same thing happens in very hard water areas with calcium deposits, I just shampoo my badgers once a month and am all good and thankfully my water is very soft.It's not dirt so much as the residue from all that soap! I think they benefit from a good clean every once in a while.
I do the same and for boar brushes I also apply conditioner to the stems. This seems to help prevent Semogue loft collapse and also stops the boar hairs absorbing so much gunk.Yeah your right the number one killer of badger brushes is soap residue at the base of the hairs, it clings to the base of the hair and makes the hair brittle and fragile, the same thing happens in very hard water areas with calcium deposits, I just shampoo my badgers once a month and am all good and thankfully my water is very soft.
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