I was hoping that she would find the Revlon comparable and we could save the expense of the T3. No such luck. She first used to T3 and found that it was much quieter than her current dryer and that it reduced the time it took to dry her hair by about 10 minutes. When she next used the Revlon, she ended up burning her hair and refuses to ever use it again. She's been using the T3 for about three weeks as remains very happy with it.
Being the more analytical one, I decided to do a scientific comparison between the two. Note that I only had one sample of each dryer and I didn't use calibrated instruments, so these observations are only useful in comparing the two samples that I had.
The first and most important difference concerned the temperature of the air exiting these two dryers while set for high output and hot temperature. The T3 held a fairly consistent temperature that most of the time fell between 190 and 210 degrees. Extremes fell between 180 and 230 degrees, but these were for only a second or two before the temperature returned to 200+/-10 degrees.
The Revlon was much less consistent. Its temperature continuously fluctuated between 130 and 235 degrees. Once I observed the temperature spike to almost 260 degrees. I must have been one of these spikes the burned my wife's hair. I took measurements over three different periods and noticed wide fluctuation during each one. Keep in mind that I only had one sample of each dryer so these problems may be caused by a defective unit and not indicative of the entire line.
Both dryers are very quiet compared to those that my wife has used in the past. The T3 ran at about 100 decibels at the intake and output ends and about 90 decibels on the side. From one foot away, the dryer ran from 78 to 84 decibels. The Revlon was a little louder, running about 105db at the ends to 90db on the side. From one foot, it in ranged from 82-89 decibels. These measurements were taken in our bathroom which has almost no sound absorption.
The Revlon did push out more air. On the high settings, the air exiting the Revlon had almost twice the force of that of the T3. On the low setting, T3 had about 75% of the force of the Revlon.
Bottom line: The Revlon had temperature problems and burned my wife's hair. If that could be fixed, it would be a great dryer as it's 1/10 the cost on the T3. But, right now, there's no way my wife is going to give up her T3.
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For my entire half century of life, I've been "blessed" with curly hair which morphs to piles of frizz in rainy, snowy or humid weather. Regular hand-held hair dryers never quite dried my very-thick hair and didn't prevent the frizz. This one not only dries my hair, but does so quickly and a lot more quietly than any other I've used. The best thing is that it really does reduce the FrizzFactor significantly. I won't claim it's completely gone, but having 90% less frizz is cause for celebration and a four-star rating. By the way, I live in "HotLanta" where frizzy-hair weather lasts longer than a Maine winter.Best Deals on T3 Bespoke Labs 83808-SE Featherweight Professional Ionic Ceramic
I've been using a Super Solano professional dryer for years but was burning my hair, so, after a lot of internet research, decided to try this model. This dryer does not push out as much air, but it is much lighter and quieter which at first made me think it was not doing as good a job. To my surprise, it actually did a better job in the same amount of time. Despite the heat, no burning occurred, and my slightly wavy hair was nice and straight, shiny and smooth. Not really sure what ions or tourmaline do, but the results are solid.Honest reviews on T3 Bespoke Labs 83808-SE Featherweight Professional Ionic Ceramic
I have had two T3 Tourmaline hair dryers and both have seriously dangerous wiring issues and caused electrical sparks and fire down the cord. I'm sending T3's blow dryer to the Federal Trade Commission to investigate the safety, but since that process takes time, I wanted to alert others of the fire and electorcution hazard of the T3 hair dryer.I purchased a T3 hair dryer on Amazon (a purchase that can be verified). After using it for less than 8 months, it fired 6-8 inch red sparks when turned on. The sparks from the electrical fire extended a couple feet down the cord. I was lucky that my arm was outstretched and am thankful for not being electrocuted.
An isolated incident unrelated to the T3 dryer itself, you might think. Well, I did, and based on the glowing reviews, I replaced that T3 hair dryer with another one. At about the ten month point (last week), I turned on the dryer and a loud screeching noise erupted from dryer, giving off a terrible electrical fire smell, and blowing the fuse. I'm grateful that the dryer's dangerous malfunction tripped the switch before being electrocuted.
The T3 dryers aren't the only items I use in that outlet, which works perfectly fine for anything else (e.g., waterpik, hair iron, etc.). Nor was I around water when both of these T3 dryers basically exploded into electrical flames. I'm not a cat with nine lives, so two T3 hair dryers that threaten to be fatal was enough.
I contacted T3 with the limited information on their site, alerting the company and asking for their mailing address to return their consumer hair dryer to inspect for safety. They absolutely won't give out their mailing address, even when alerted to a potentially fatal product. The T3 company just sends template emails, with no contact person, name, or address, and demands to know that model number. This is in response to a request to send them one of their products that is so seriously defective that it could be fatal.
Now, I don't run a consumer products company, but if I was told a customer was nearly electrocuted and sparks are firing from my product, I'm pretty certain I'd be responsive, regardless of whether the dangerous item was black or white. Very shady in my view, prompting me to wonder if there are others who've experienced T3's defective product and give up trying to contact the company.
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