h a l f b a k e r yA few slices short of a loaf.
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Bun from me. But how many MV would
it take to make those short bristles
stand up? (Just had a thought - the
same device would also overcome
impotence.....) |
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I don't think a Van der Graaf generator would affect such short hair. |
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The way a Van der Graaf generator makes hair stand on end is by the repulsion between hairs. The science-museum demonstrations show the hair on the head standing up. The Van der Graaf generator doesn't effect the hair root. |
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Daily shaving is of very short hair, where (I suspect) the effect of the rigidness of the hair would be greater than the effect of the replusion between the hairs, or between the hair and the skin. I suspect that the very short hairs don't have enough surface area for the charge to build up on, to overcome the rigidness. I had a similar idea and didn't post it, for that reason. |
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Cold does make short hair stand up. Maybe an ice-wand-shaver? |
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Another detail - most men use running water as part of the lubrication for shaving, and to clean the razor. Your insulated shaving platform could not be plumbed, because that would ground it. You would have to use a bowl of water, and be careful not to spill any, lest it trickle off the platform and ground you, causing your hair to go back to normal. |
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You might not even need the razor.
Just have a metal plate wired to earth,
but with an insulated handle. Bring is
slowly towards your bristly face and, at
some critical combination of voltage
and distance, a million tiny arcs will
leap from bristle-tips to metal plate.
Hey presto! - your stubble is but a
cloud of smoke. |
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p.s. - can also double as a jump-starter
for elderly relatives with dicky hearts. |
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