Disposable grooming razors are well known in the art. A typical razor sold today involves a multi-blade cartridge that is mounted on an elongate plastic handle, and the razor is used until the blades become dull. Some razors are completely discarded when the blades become dull, and some razors accept fresh blade cartridges to replace dull blades. To be specific with terminology, shaver head holds the cartridge, and the “cartridge” holds the razor(s). The handle and head may be retained for further use after the cartridge is discarded. While the preferences of the user dictate how many shaves are preferable before the razor is replaced, there is degree of waste associated with this type of razor where the razor cartridge has a very limited life cycle. The present invention aims to reduce the waste and dramatically increase the life cycle of the razor cartridge in a reliable and cost-effective manner.
The present invention is a grooming razor that utilizes a pivoting head arrangement where the head supports a pair of razor cartridges, each aligned for shaving in opposite directions. In one embodiment, a single shaving head holds two oppositely facing shaving cartridges. When each cartridge is oriented in respective diametrically opposed directions, it allows the cartridges to be utilized in a successive manner, where one direction cuts while the second direction shrops the non-cutting blades, and then the opposite occurs in the second direction. That is, the blade's edges are being pushed, and will clean and strop the blades in the other cartridge that are being dragged simultaneously backwards across the skin in the opposite direction. In the present invention, the orientation of the second, or non-cutting, cartridge positions the blades flush against the skin, which has two significant repercussions. First, the motion of dragging the non-used blades across the skin has the effect of stropping the blades, thereby extending the useful life of the razor with each stroke. Second, the action of dragging the second set of blades across the skin in the non-cutting direction causes any whiskers, hair, shaving cream, and other clogging material to be pulled out of the blades. This creates a cleaning effect that eliminates or reduces the amount of rinsing necessary to utilize the second set of blades, and the second opposing cartridge providing the shaver with freshly stropped and cleaned blades for each and every subsequent stroke.
In this manner, the number of shaves can be dramatically extended before replacing the cartridge, reducing waste and improving the efficiency of the device. When operated with an elongate handle, the dual cartridge arrangement can be coupled to a spring and locking arrangement that flips the head one hundred eighty degrees and then locks the head in place. The flipping or rotating mechanism can be manual, or automatic where a press button causes a spring to rotate the cartridge back and forth between two positions, or 180 degrees in one direction depending on the rotating mechanism being used. In an alternate embodiment, the dual cartridge system can also be used with a small cage-like gripping device in lieu of an elongate handle, where the cage-like gripping device can be easily grasped by the fingers and allows the head to pivot along two different axes to better adjust to the surface to be shaven.
These, and other features of the invention, will best be understood in light of the detailed description below in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
The exploded view of
The shaving head 18 connects to the spindle 40 and can swivel/rotate about the spindle. The shaving head 18 may be fixed to, and rotate with, the disk 46, while the other disk 44 can be fixed to the end cap 34, which in turn is locked in the opening 24 of the neck 22. In this manner, the shaving head 18 can be rotated relative to the handle 12 and locked into one of the two orientations by engaging the respective projections 48 and recesses 50 until the disks are flush. When the disks 44,46 are aligned with their respective projections and recesses, the spring 26 provides an compressive force to bias the disks together in the flush arrangement, such that the system “locks” in place when the alignment is correct. The user may overcome the biasing of the spring 26 by manual force of rotating the disks out of alignment and into the alternate alignment when necessary to use the opposite set of blades 21, 23. Thus the shaving head 18 may be rotated between two distinct positions, each corresponding with one set of blades 21,23 oriented toward the user. As the first set of blades is used up, the shaving head 18 is simply rotated about the handle 12 until the disks 44,46 disengage and then reengage to lock in place, positioning the second set of blades in position for use. This process is repeated indefinitely thanks to the shropping effect of the non-active blade set.
With further reference to
The present invention can also be used as a two-way shaving cartridge. That is, rather than rotating the cartridge every day (or other interval), the cartridge is used in both a fore-stroke and backstroke directions. This bi-directional mode makes it particularly suitable to shave difficult areas such as circular hair growth areas many men have on their necks where the hair pattern changes direction. Stroking with a regular shaver over areas such as these would require several singular direction stroking passes to obtain a clean shave, but by stroking in a bi-directional way (like a scrubbing motion), those irregular hair growth patterns easily shave cleanly with far fewer strokes, thereby reducing shaving time and possible skin irritation.
By dragging the blades backwards across the skin, that action tends to unclog the blades during use from soap, whiskers, etc. Additionally, the razor self-strops, thereby extending blade edge life, and self-cleans which decreases shaving time. It also can be used to remove suborn multi-directional hair pattern growths with bi-directional stroking.
Effectively, the shaver of the present invention is used by making one direction shaving strokes (like all other shavers with elongated handles do), but instead of stopping to rinse out the clogged blades, the user simply rotates the shaving head 180 degrees. This repeatable rotating action repeatedly cleans out the clogged shaving cartridge while keeping the other cartridge clean and sharp throughout the shave.
With the handle-less shaver 80, the user's hand is very close to the shaving surface, which eliminates leverage issues found in shavers with elongated handles, so control with this shaver is unmatched, making nicks and scrapes far less likely.
The foregoing descriptions and depictions are by no means limiting, and the invention's scope is broader than the specific embodiments so described. A person of ordinary skill in the art would readily recognize many modifications and substitutions to the described embodiments, and the scope of the present invention is intended to include all such modifications and substitutions.
This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/637,489, filed Mar. 2, 2018, the contents of which are fully incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62637489 | Mar 2018 | US |