When I did my SuperMax run through I also bought in all manner of other subcontinent blades and picked up a tuck of Laser Super Stainless, Super Platinum and Ultra. The Ultra are triple coated and gave a really smooth shave. I gave it a 7/10 which in my books is a "good shave" and placed it amongst blades like RK, Treet Silver or Gillette 365. The Ultra is the only one I've tried so far ...
The Laser Ultra Triple Coated blades are in an entirely different class of quality from the other Laser blades, in may outdated experience.
Note: The package will say it is made by Laser Shaving in Hyderabad, India.
I don't know if there are other manufacturers using the name "Laser" of "Lazer."
I tried some other Laser blades prior to the Ultras, and didn't like them.
When the Laser Ultra Triple Coated blades hit the market about 10 years ago, they blew away most of the other blades in India, in my experience. Yet they were so cheap it was hard to believe my whiskers. When I compared notes with shopkeepers, they concurred.
The Ultras seemed aimed at taking the market away from the P&G Gillette-Wilkinson blades, which were cheap and ubiquitous. Those G-W blades could last a week or two, if you didn't mind shaving with a blade that started out dull but was durable enough to stay dull that long, thanks to Swedish steel. But the G-W were actually "sharper" than most Indian blades, so they were popular. The Vidyut-Zorrick-Super-Max blades ranged from usable but over-priced, to atrocious and dirt cheap, to unpredictably bad, as in their most expensive Super-Max Titanium blades, which usually tanked after two shaves. If you jack up the price enough, it is amazing what you can sell to some gullible people. Super-Max did make some excellent cartridge razors, though, presumably using modern equipment.
As to Gillette 365 blades, they were one of the cheapest blades in India at the time, and certainly the cheapest P&G blade. They were also among the sharpest, if you were lucky. P&G only seemed sharpen one or two or maybe three edges. You could easily see with the naked eye which edges were sharpened. My assumption is they were quality control rejects, which they stamped the 365 label on. (Quality control in India is an inside joke that shopkeepers will tell you about, if you ask.) Maybe they've changed, but I am not about to find out.
The quality of the Laser Ultras, on the other hand, was absolutely consistently good. I still use them. Maybe a few times more recently I have not gotten a good shave, but it may not have been the blade's fault -- I'm not certain if their quality control is still so good, or not, as much of my stock is old. The razor and prep may affect your experience with these blades.
The key factor in choosing Ultras is price. I buy them on eBay directly from India, cheap. They are surprisingly sharp and smooth. And they are still better than the current Indian made Gillette-Wilkinson blades, which are nothing special, though not as good as the Chinese G-W version, which I used years ago, and were aggressively sharp. But they certainly are not as good as the Treet 7 Days Platinum, for example.
There are some razors where a super sharp, aggressive blade is not appropriate. And if you only shave once or twice a week, you should probably just use a blade once, and use one that is gentle on the skin. Laser Ultra might fit the bill for you.
As to the "triple" coating specifics, we can assume PTFE and the usual plastic protective coating. They don't feel like bare stainless, so I would assume some chrome or ceramic lies beneath these. Don't plan on getting more than two or three shaves, though I sometimes get more.
There are a lot of companies that make blades in a range of quality and price. In India, some consumers go for really inexpensive blades. And sometimes they make several labels so that distributors can sell them in competing stores in a neighborhood and offer different merchandise. And some consumers have never used a really good blade to compare them with. The result: There are a lot of garbage blades in the world.
Why garbage blades, such as the lesser Lasers, would show up in Europe, I cannot say for sure. Obviously, if an importer can buy them for a pittance and sell them for a pound, there is a profit to be had. Another possibility is expats will remain religiously loyal to brand names they know from their home country*. Some people just like a "bargain."
Talk to people from India or Pakistan or Korea or Japan or wherever and they will proudly brag about the blades from their home country being the best in the world!!! Sometimes they are. And sometimes they aren't.
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*The most absurd example of this, in my travels, is seeing over-priced imported brands of white vinegar in shops. Wine vinegar, malt vinegar, cider vinegar, balsamic vinegar, this I can understand. But WHITE vinegar is just diluted industrial acetic acid. Always, I'm not sure, but it sure smells like it, and that's what the label usually says. Acetic acid is the stuff used in developing film, so I know well what it smells like. And photographers know they could substitute white vinegar.
However, I've noticed that the expression "You are what you eat" takes on a whole new level for Asians abroad. For example, if a Korean doesn't eat almost exclusively Korean food and brands while abroad, when they return home people WILL KNOW, and you will no longer be considered Korean. (I am told fried chicken is allowed.) I've seen Chinese abroad with a similar obsession, and then rant about how the food at the Chinese restaurant is not real Chinese food. Oh, and a Korean went into a white hot rage, literally screaming while we waited online at the airport, when he found out the local Korean restaurant used Japanese brand of soy sauce (made in America)!!!
If you plan of moving abroad from the UK or EU or Australia, not to fear: You can buy your favorite brand of white vinegar courtesy of eBay and have it shipped around the globe if you are homesick enough to pay the price of a nice tin of pate de foie gras for something you could buy locally - absolutely identical tasting - for the price of a candy bar.
So using your native razor blade brand is essential, for some, to maintain your national identity.
However, sometimes having stuff shipped is in order. In China, the local mayonnaise (not salad dressing, which was commonly used in small eateries) was bizarrely inedible - it was so intensely sweet it cauterized my taste buds. However, on Taobao you could buy online some excellent mayonnaise from Russia with no import duty, cheaper than in stores. At least it had a Russian label. It was actually mayonnaise made in South Korea, in a virtually identical container, though written in Hangul in Korea. It tasted exactly like what I remember Hellman's/Best Mayonnaise used to taste like years ago, before the corporate takeovers and MBA cost cutters removed 90 percent of the flavor, a sliver at a time (now it is mostly white vinegar and sugar in vegetable oil and water, with an egg waved over it). So it is a safe bet that the U.S. military helped set up a Hellman's mayonnaise plant to supply the bases in Korea decades ago, and the Koreans never changed the recipe. Good for them! So I was able to buy fine American mayonnaise via a time warp, made in Korea, shipped to Russia and then trucked to me from within China and dumped on the sidewalk. Oh, and the Russian goose liver pate was cheap and tasty. It was nice while it lasted.