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Electric flossers, and electric toothbrushes?

Lost_My_Mind

TMF Regular
Joined
Dec 27, 2001
Messages
290
Points
16
I see people mention electric flossers, and electric toothbrushes.

But when I went to target, the electric toothbrushes were $100 and the electric flossers were water based.

Anybody have any reccomendations on where to find the good ones? And are the electric flossers always water based? I never see water in the videos.
 
When in doubt, try amazon.

I'm a major flosser fan. Great for toes and bellybuttons.
 
I see people mention electric flossers, and electric toothbrushes.

But when I went to target, the electric toothbrushes were $100 and the electric flossers were water based.

Anybody have any reccomendations on where to find the good ones? And are the electric flossers always water based? I never see water in the videos.
They work fantastically on many lees (though not all!). Depending upon the toothbrush, they can generate the sensations of both, depending upon what the vibrating head is like when the brush is removed (some are a little too sharp or uncomfortably shaped). The brush part can be a little uncomfortable for some people on areas other than the feet, So being able to remove the brush head and have a smooth-ish non-aggressive texture can make it more versatile. There are some really cheap flossers that just take AA or AAA batteries and have a little sharp plastic flosser head that can be replaced. Those are too scratchy for my liking, but the plastic underneath is fairly non-aggressive and works pretty well, though about the same if not less so than the toothbrush without a brush head. The somewhat more expensive flossers with the piece of floss between two tines tend to work very well. The tines work like the brush without a head. Honestly, I'd just go with the brush first to see if you like the concept, and if you feel like you want to try flossers later then go for it.

As far as price, you can usually pay as little or as much as you want for things, quality and features often being the compromise for lower prices. But for tickling purposes, you're mostly just looking for good, strong vibration. As long as you're not spending $5 on it, it'll probably be good enough to play with. The one @milagros317 is a good option. If you want to browse around on Amazon, you can filter by price ranges. Many have features like different intensity settings and patterns. If you can get one that has different intensities and also offers a continuous mode then it will be helpful.

Warning: these things can be devastatingly ticklish on toes, belly buttons, and necks for some lees! 🙂
 
The electric flosser I have, $6.99 each from Walgreens. The catch was I had to order online and then did an in-store pickup. Uses one or two AAA batteries. I bought 4 of them. I use them on feet: specifically under/between toes and soles. Almost all my lees receive tickling on bare feet. With the flosser, if you do it right, you can actually poke it though the fabric of socks if your lee is wearing them.
 
I do buy sonic care's from target/walmart, and yaaah 2 can be 100 to 200 bucks lol 🙁
 
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