(07-22-2015, 05:00 PM)ShadowsDad Wrote: Never having tried a DEvette and with no motivation to, I wonder how much like an '11 R41 it is? The R41 has the DE blade basically floating in space, being restrained only by the top cap of the razor, but with a huge blade exposure. The comb is there but doesn't really do very much. It's a safety razor in that it limits the depth of gouges to under 1/2" (that might be a small exaggeration :-) ).
I can say without compromising the agreement to not discuss the merits of the shave with Brian S, that the SEvettes definitely do not all taste like chicken.
It's a good question about how close the R41 is to a devette, and I have bakelite DEs with similar geometry and a massive blade gap.
These razors all give a very very close and very very long lasting shaves.
The devette gives the absolute closest shave with the absolute least irritation (as you have discovered with the sevette) but the other razors are much smoother since, although as you point out the guard does not now act in a safety capacity, the guard serves to stretch the skin which greatly improves the experience.
The devette and sevette leave the skin calmest since nothing touches it apart from the blade edge, but the Spitfire R41 and those 1920's bakelites are almost as aggressive but much smoother during the shave due to the skin stretching action of the guard.
And it is exciting to hear that the OCMM sevette behaves differently to the sevette 1912 - this means there is a lot more to be discovered.
Next stop Clogpruf and G-Bar sevettes eh?
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