If water salts are actually the major cause of dulling, I wonder if a quick silicone spray or compressed air would work. It would be a lot less hassle than hauling out a hair dryer, and a hiar dryer might just evaporate water leaving the salts behind depending on the air pressure.
Being water repellent, WD-40 would probably work if you wanted your face to smell like, well… WD-40. But then, there probably would not be much WD left on the razor and the aroma might not survive shave cream on the next shave. Mr. KG, please experiment with spraying your razor with WD-40 or silicone spray a let us knows the results. If a simple spray could double the life of disposable razors, you could go down in history as saving the world from millions of tons of plastic disposable razors in land fills each year!
From my own experience I think that shaving is unique in that even a slight decrease in sharpness can result in a significant decrease in shaving efficacy and comfort:
http://bessex.com/forum/showthread.php?t...shave+with
Being water repellent, WD-40 would probably work if you wanted your face to smell like, well… WD-40. But then, there probably would not be much WD left on the razor and the aroma might not survive shave cream on the next shave. Mr. KG, please experiment with spraying your razor with WD-40 or silicone spray a let us knows the results. If a simple spray could double the life of disposable razors, you could go down in history as saving the world from millions of tons of plastic disposable razors in land fills each year!
From my own experience I think that shaving is unique in that even a slight decrease in sharpness can result in a significant decrease in shaving efficacy and comfort:
http://bessex.com/forum/showthread.php?t...shave+with

