Losing Weight

Following some feedback on my Washbag / Dopp photos I have been exploring ways to reduce some of the weight. The two heaviest items were my electric toothbrush and electric razor – both of which I’ve managed to slim down somewhat.

photo-18-9-16-12-08-44

On the left is my Oral B Braun Professional Care 1000 rechargeable toothbrush that I’ve been carrying with me since September 2011 (£29.99). It’s an excellent brush – deep clean, with a timer. A bit noisy but I’ve never had any issues with it – very reliable. The brush weighs in at 130g (including the 4g head) and the charger weighs in at 123g (including the 8g black AU adapter). I would also stock up on the Oral B heads when they were cheap resulting in my carrying up to 8 of these 4g heads. I then decided that since 253g was a lot to carry for trips I would buy a separate non electric toothbrush – in this case a Colgate 360 (23g). Tot that up and I’m carrying a total of 308g for my teeth.

Enter the Colgate Omron Pro Clinical 150. I purchased this battery powered toothbrush six weeks ago from Priceline for a mere $20 (about £12). It weighs just 51g (including the 4g head and the two 7g AAA batteries). As always – Energizer Lithium is the way to go with batteries for the lightest weight and longest life. The brush itself is significantly quieter – probably because the head vibrates rather than spins – but the clean is certainly equivalent to the Oral B if not better. I’ve only been using it for six weeks so I guess time will tell but I’m pretty happy with the results. Also since this toothbrush is almost the same weight as my travel toothbrush I don’t mind carrying it on trips – allowing me to ditch the 360, and the heads are sold in packs of two so no risk of carrying too many.

I’ve slimmed down my toothbrush from 308g to 59g (or 276g to 51g without spare heads) and my teeth actually feel cleaner for it.

Next up; the electric razor:

I purchased the battery powered Philips PQ203 in September 2013 from Boots UK for £12. The shave is clean although it can be time consuming – not quite as effective as the three headed razors which weigh a lot more. It’s a neat little device that weighs in at 136g (including the two 15g AA batteries and the 6g cap)

photo-18-9-16-12-14-44

Happy with the Philips shave (as opposed to the Braun which I generally don’t like), I decided to see what new products they have – sure enough they have an improved travel shaver; the Philips Norelco PQ228 which charges from a USB port in the base. Again with only six weeks on the clock it’s difficult to gauge longevity but the shave is significantly better and the redisign makes the device more ergonomically pleasing 🙂 This weighs in at 114g (including the 6g cap) plus 13g for the USB cable (although I already carry one of these). OK so a drop in total weight of 9g from 136g to 127g isn’t exactly worth writing home about but given the improvement in shave I’d say it was a worthwhile purchase.

It’s also interesting that I moved from rechargeable to battery on the toothbrush but the other way on the razor. I guess my eco credentials remain balanced.

EDIT 02/03/17: Since writing this blog I have ditched the Philips PQ228 shaver. The 8-hr charge for 30-min of use became an imbuggerance – particularly when the thing died mid shave and I had to wait an hour before it would even turn on again. Initially I returned to my trusty Philips PQ203 but for Xmas I treated myself to a newer Philips Norelco PQ208 (AU$24 from eBay) which is, by all accounts, exactly the same as the PQ203 but with ‘self sharpening blades’. In any case I needed new blades which I couldn’t source separately. It also weighs marginally less at 130g (92g for the shaver, 2xAA 30g, Brush 2g, Guard 6g) thus negating 66% of my whopping 9g reduction on the PQ228 anyway.

6 thoughts on “Losing Weight

    • I actually did look at the Pocket-Pro, C250 which is rechargable via a charger case (as opposed to the C150 which is battery powered). The brush is very slightly smaller (since there’s no housing for batteries) weighing in at 48g with head compared to the C150 51g. The charger, however, is another matter. The case itself is far larger than it need to be and weighs 100g alone, then there’s the cable (15g) and the insanely heavy wall adapter (72g) giving a total weight of 235g. Even if I ditched the charger and cable (and used my existing Apple charger and generic micro USB cable) I’d still be lugging the 100g charger. For the sake of buying batteries it wasn’t worth the extra weight. Then there was the extra cost, the retail on the C250 was $150 AUD. I did manage to find it online for $100 but that’s still a far cry from the $30 I paid for the C150. I can buy a lot of batteries for $70. My advice; go with the C150.

      Like

  1. The shaver looks like a useful tool, but 8 hours of charging for only 30 minutes of shaving? What is your experience with that?

    Like

    • Yes. You hit the nail on the head Henk. Since writing this blog I have ditched the USB charge shaver and returned to the battery powered Philips. 9g is worth the hit for a shaver that lasts for ages.

      Like

  2. Pingback: Everything I Own (2017 Update) | BLACKSHINE

Leave a comment