(04-10-2016, 03:21 AM)gfaulknor Wrote: Wanted to dislike this razor. Gimmick? Flexible head, next, someone else will make one that loads two blades. Here we go again. Then a friend loaned me his OneBlade. Holy Sh*t, this really is different. Normally with other razors, minimum 3 passes, usually more. Two and done. Definition of smooth and efficient. After every shave I use an Alum block as quality control for my technique. Perfection. Purchased a OneBlade. Now my concern; springs that are in the head? What's the life of these springs? Surely there is a spring we could buy? Avoid the floppy-head. I'm also waiting for guys to customize their razors with different spring rates, no?
Another satisfied OneBlade user! It sounds as if you went through what a member on another forum described as the 5 stages of OneBlade acquisition: Anger, Denial, Curiosity, Acceptance, Joy.
It really is a special razor in it's own class, and I wish you a lifetime of perfect shaves with it!
As for the spring, who knows... there are springs on the caps of 100+ year old razors that work flawlessly today. The OneBlade spring should be made out of better alloys then razor makers had available then (stainless steel?), and it is Teflon coated to boot. I don't think it would wear out in a lifetime of usage. But if it did, the warranty would cover you as long as they are still being made. As for custom springs the user could install? That is a possibility I never considered, but I'm sure someone would try it if the razor ever became popular enough. Personally I find the tension on the default spring just right, but I'm sure engineering minded folks could install a spring as loose as a cart, to one tight enough to block the pivot motion entirely, and anywhere in between. I'm too personally afraid to take the razor apart to experiment, but I'd love to see detailed mod instructions from someone brave enough to attempt it! Any takers?