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Stainless Steel: Kiss My Shiny Metal Toy

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ionsawmill

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This is an article that I wrote for BisexualPlayground.com. Reposting it here for the benefit of the group:

 

Stainless steel: whether it's wrapping a DeLorean, lying beside your dinner plate, or facing the appliances in your fancy new kitchen, stainless steel has an allure that is easy to understand. It's smooth, it's hard, conducts heat and electricity and reflects light like a mirror. It will also last forever, if treated with care. If you're the sort who likes a more firm G-spot or prostate stimulation, stainless is a must. The smooth surface is non-allergenic, won't absorb lubricant like latex, and doesn't break down with your favorite lube like silicone or latex can. It's also unbreakable, doesn't bend and actually has antibacterial properties. If you decide not to keep your toy forever, it's 100% recyclable. Beat that!

 

Stainless steel is made by mixing iron and chromium, with the chromium making up from 11% to 26% of the alloy, depending on the application. The chromium forms a passivation layer of chromium oxide when exposed to oxygen. This layer, which is impervious to water and air, protects the metal beneath and quickly reforms when the surface is scratched.

 

Because it's a metal, stainless transmits heat and cold much better than other types of sex toy materials. It can be placed in the refrigerator, freezer or a pot of warm water to lower or raise its temperature. Because it is corrosion resistant and impervious to water and air, it is incredibly easy to care for. Stainless is non-porous, and can be disinfected with a weak bleach solution (10% or less), rubbing alcohol or simply by running it through the dishwasher. (Skip the rinsing agents. They can cause corrosion in some low-chromium stainless and can also irritate the genitalia.) Dry well with a soft cloth and your toy is ready for action.

 

Metals are excellent conductors of electricity, so stainless toys can be used as one pole of dipole electrical stimulation kits. Just make sure the connection between the toy and the leads is secure, and follow the manufacturer's warnings.

 

Some of the anal plugs made of stainless steel are works of art, much like the new borosilicate glass items that have recently hit the market. Warning: you may like your new stainless toy so much you want to leave it out on the mantle, or on the headboard of your bed. They're just that beautiful.

 

Remember that scene in the Christmas movie where the kid gets his tongue stuck on the flagpole? Keep this in mind if you decided to freeze your stainless toy. Let it thaw a little before using. Likewise, if you decide to warm your toy, check it against your skin (like the back of your hand) to make sure it's safe for your more sensitive parts. Check for scratches or burrs before use, as even a small scratch can open up microtears in your anus or genitals, making lovemaking into bloodsport.

 

Stainless might be a little more expensive (around three to four times the cost of plastic or silicone) but with all of the above going for it, it's sure to become a favorite part of your adult toy collection.

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That reads so much like advertisement and fails to provide a balanced perspective of the merits of stainless sex toys. For the most part, I think a stainless toy could be generally desirable as a novelty yet maybe not the best material for most situations. Considering the cost premium, I think glass or silicone would more often be the better toy material.

 

First, there are several grades of stainless and without specifying the composition of the alloy all that simplified technical mumbo-jumbo has little meaning. Each of the wide variety of materials used in the construction of toys has its own unique concerns for use and maintenance. There may be special situations where the unique properties of stainless make it the better choice of materials, but I think that's unlikely to be a common bedroom.

 

Stainless is a marginal thermal conductor, that's why cookware typically has copper or aluminum for a cladding or core. Not a big deal, really because thermal conductivity is not a big feature in normal sex toys.

 

Stainless passivation , is really cool science and a big source of the desirability of stainless. Interestingly, the thin passivation layer degrades the electrical conductivity properties and that along with metallic ion migration into sensitive flesh make it among the poorer choices for electro-stimulation electrodes. Use of stainless material for electrodes would likely promote a very ugly form of corrosion (black flash) in the absence of careful passivation after each such use. The best electrodes are carbon - safe and inexpensive. Old school TENS electrodes had fine stainless mesh, but they were single-use and not approved for body cavities.

 

The antimicrobial properties of stainless are at best marginal. Copper, brass and silver are much better. You mention a weak bleach solution for sanitizing the toys, while that would work fine in a perfect world, soap and water would be just as effective. A strong bleach solution would likely compromise the passivation layer. Common dishwasher detergent would be hell on the stainless toy too, just like it disfigures cheap flatware.

 

I'm all for exploring new materials for use in sex toys, but I think stainless really misses the boat for most normal folks.

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