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- Silly Suffolk
Like the brass abacus idea.Routines here:-
- leave the blade in, but rinse well and prop up so it can drain. Always mindful of the injunction on blade packets "Do not wipe the blade".
- ditch any DE blade after 3 uses, which I record on a small brass abacus.
If it's rabbit holes, I'm stuck down several of them, with no particular intentions to get out, but merely to swap one for another, for a time.
Unlikely but you'll learn to enjoy the darkness.Will I ever see day light again
Welcome darkness my old friend.................................................Unlikely but you'll learn to enjoy the darkness.
My method is to use a razor until the blade is finished so the blade stays in there until end-of-life. The razor is then cleaned and replaced with the next one in rotation*.
*I don't have a formal rotation - I normally pick something when perusing my collection from the porcelain throne.
Now that is Smmmmmmoooooooooooth
That is my approach; razor loaded and blade not touched until I am finished and ready to dispose - as ever YMMV.Since watching a Gillette 1950s infomercial that someone posted a fair few months ago, I have taken to leaving the blade well alone once installed in the razor. That, and the only instruction on a tuck of blades, as already mentioned is "Do not wipe blade".
I rinse in hot water and then leave on a horizontal stand to dry.
Don't want to be a blade poor unwrapper-er, loader, dropper, etc. [As shown in the infomercial]
I am one of those who takes everything apart, cleans, dry and then puts it all back together.
Now that raised a chortle!Car? Refrigerator? Wife?
Car? Refrigerator? Wife?
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