(This post was last modified: 12-03-2020, 11:56 PM by Blackland Razors.)
(12-03-2020, 11:48 PM)Stephanos1920 Wrote: A bend blade is under tension ,
pressing against the underside of the cap.
Thus ,it requires the same or bigger force
in order to move to the opposite direction,
away from the underside curvature of the cap.
But rigid ,no it is not.
Physics is not a matter
of business experience or opinion.
A spring under tension is harder to bounce ,but rigid it is not.
Blade rigidity is achieved when :
1 ) The free end distance of the blade equals
the clamp distance.
And
2 ) When both are kept as short as possible.
If the clamp distance is greater than the
free end distance ,no matter in what degree
the blade is bend under the cap,since it
has the ability to move,given the circumstances it will move (vibrate aka chatter ).
This phenomenon will not occur to everyone,
of course .
Folks with hard,dense and thick stubble are
more prone to experience it .
Especially when shaving against the grain.
Angle of attack does play a role ,
but will not make the shave much
more comfortable ,for those few with
steel-wire stubble.
I'm not sure if this was intentional, but I enjoyed the poetic structure of this. In terms of content, you're sort of right, except that in this case we don't actually care if the blade bends downward. We care if the blade bends upward as that is the direction shaving occurs in and that requires a somewhat different interpretation of the physics involved.