Here are my observations and miscellaneous ramblings after spending a week or so with the Bunny.
First impression of the Bunny is that it is quite attractive, and nicely presented in its tin. The homage to the Schick F type is obvious.
The Bunny does not look or perform like a prototype or "homemade" razor. Fit and finish are excellent. The interchangeable combs fit into the head with no play or gaps. Everything is nicely polished.
At 1.8 oz the Bunny is heavier than most injectors, and has a nice solid feel in the hand. The polished aluminum handle is smooth - no knurling or lines.
Loading the blade is essentially like any other injector, although there are some subtle differences. The key slides into a machined channel in the head, and the spring is on the back side of the key. It feels a little odd, but works fine. Of course, I load an injector a little different from most people, being left-handed.
I used a Chinese Schick, a Personna (Ted Pella) and a NOS Schick Super Chromium blade. All loaded flawlessly, even the Personna with the cheesy dispenser. Blades slid in smoothly, a safe distance away from the blade stops. The spring seems to hold the blade securely, although it did shift out of position when I cleaned the Bunny in my ultrasonic jewelry cleaner.
I started with the MILD comb and the NOS Schick blade. The first thing I noticed is that this is one smooth shaver. It's also quiet - very little audible feedback.
The blade is mounted at close to a 90 degree angle to the straight handle, so the correct blade angle is unconventional, to say the least. With this angle and its open comb, the Bunny reminded me more of my C1 Schick Repeating Razor than any injector. The correct angle is with the handle nearly perpendicular to the face. Intentional or otherwise, there are a couple of "safety" features. The comb sticks out in front of the blade, and if the angle is too steep the comb prevents the blade from touching the face. The spring rises above the blade, and acts in a similar manner if the angle is too shallow.
The comb not only sticks out in front of the blade, it sits below the blade. The result is that when shaving there is essentially nowhere for the lather to go. I bowl lather, and like to lather up like the Ever-Ready guy. The lather builds up on the comb and is smeared back onto the face.
Fortunately there is an easy workaround - just rinse the razor after each stoke. After a few shaves this becomes automatic. The effect could probably be minimized by using a thin lather and not piling so much on - but where's the fun in that? The lather buildup actually comes in handy when blade buffing.
Getting back to the shave itself, the MILD comb was surprising. Shaving felt quite smooth and mild, as expected. However, after the shave I found the it was unexpectedly close as well, approaching BBS.
I probably could have been happy staying with the MILD comb, but naturally I had to experiment, and I found the NOTSO comb was even better. I noticed a little more audible feedback, I could feel the blade a bit more, and the shave was even closer - but still buttery smooth and irritation free.
I tried the WILD comb and found even more blade feel and audible feedback. Mental lapses on my part were now punished with a bit of irritation and/or a weeper or two. However, the shave didn't seem to be any closer, so I went back to the NOTSO comb and stayed with it for the rest of the week.
The Bunny does not seem to be finicky about blades. The 3 I tried all worked well, with the Chick being the smoothest/sharpest (better than the NOS Schick!). However, the differences were subtle and I could be quite happy using any of these blades in the Bunny.
I would prefer a handle with some knurling or lines, but this is purely a personal preference - I never experienced any issues with the handle becoming slippery.
The flared end of the handle results in the Bunny fitting nicely in my shaving stand!
Bottom line: The Bunny razor has a few quirks, but it is well crafted and a great shaver. If Tom ever puts them into production, I WANT ONE!
--Bob
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