Quote from: Jeneva on May 18, 2009, 02:21:33 PM
I asked for opinions on the 2 main home laser (Tria and the Silk'n) like devices a while back. I have actually used both.
I had a first gen tria. They just released the second gen after I bought mine. With the tria zapping (except facial/neck) was no worse than epilating. The face/neck area REALLY REALLY HURT, but would have been bearable. I did 2 treatments on my face and 1 on my whole body. My wife also did 2 treatments on her legs. Neither of us found that it did much if anything in the form of temporary shedding. We figured if it couldn't temp shed then perm results were out of the question. I returned it after the 30 day trial period. It is possible that the newer model is more effective, and it is also possible that both of us are just more resistant so YMMV, but I would not be looking at it again.
Right now we are trying the Silk'n. It doesn't hurt as bad as the tria. It is also causing a decent amount of temp shedding. I've hit 1 treatment all over and then 2 on my face, hands, and lower legs. My arms have completely bare spots (I didn't account for the window properly the first time (needed to lap more)). Of course it has the replacement bulb cost to consider. For us, its lower pain + temp shedding is making it look like a definate keeper. I've got decent thinning on my beard area (but nothing clear like my arms).
So the Silk'n is effectively an IPL, rather than a laser. So I guess it's going to have more effect on body hair where the follicle is closer to the surface, and could appear to cause temp shedding similar to pro-laser. That might explain why the arm treatment is working better than the face, and why the device can be higher powered over a larger area without the risk of permanent damage. Sounds like the device is working reasonably well for a home treatment, but I still doubt it will achieve the long term results of a pro-laser device on the face.

BTW I tried the Rio 60x ($400) and it stung like hell (felt like it was going to give me a tattoo) but did nothing. The device uses a really cumbersome head which makes facial work difficult, and crudely scans a dot across the skin. Difficult to see what improvements were made over their previous scanning laser, other than extending the time period to make it hurt more.

I think you will find the reason for these devices not being used on the face is the risk of an eye damage lawsuit from mis-use like Jessica says.
Chrissty