Wednesday, 30 December 2020

Unboxing the Custom Chastity Saint Permanent Chastity Device (with Other New Features)

It came... and I didn't.

I tracked the parcel as it inched its way through Auspost, get stuck at Melbourne airport, leap across the globe, land in Blighty, get caught in the Xmas shutdown, and finally Royal Mail its way to my door.

(If you've just tuned in, read about the permanent chastity device design and its devious logic here.)

Packaging as always was discrete. Nothing salacious on the exterior, and Lady Fox was hiding demurely as "L Fox."

Content Warning: 

There's a locked dick picture 

at the bottom 

of this post.

This permanent chastity device was made by Custom Chastity.  It's not in their catalogue yet, but I am sure if you email them Lady Fox will... accommodate you. She sent to me free to try out (somewhere between a review copy and a publicly visible alpha test - the only expectation is that I should blog about my experience of it) so it didn't come with the usual information sheet and enclosures. I did get a nice Christmas card, though.

The innocent looking device and seals were in a little ziplock bag, all down in raw white so I could do the dyeing myself.  It looked for all the world like one of those model kits I used to assemble when I was a kid... the Airfix  Kit From Hell!

 

In addition to the mechanically permanent closure system, there are a couple of new features.

First, the tube fits much further into the base ring and has a Rear Hood, like a vestigial version of the one on the Holy Trainer:


 

Here - post dyeing - is the rear view of my new Saint next to my original one:

 
(New Device, Right)


You'll also see it has a New Style Base Ring, that's (a) wider, (b) corrugated, and (c) oval.

"Permanent" chastity is like a Mars mission; you really don't want to commit with untried technology, but that's what I was about to do - I could only put my trust in the skills of Lady Fox.

The texture is eggshell like all Custom Chastity devices. I quite like it because it stops the surface sticking to my skin. The material is surgical nylon. As I understand, the process involves 3D printing the mould, and then pouring the nylon, so this stuff isn't porus like cheap 3D prints.

The dyeing process was simple. I got hold of a bottle of Rit DyeMore Synthetic and followed the instructions, including putting in some detergent. Once it was done it went through the dishwasher.

(Follow the Instructions)

It was the first time I'd dyed a raw white device, and half an hour of simmering took it to a lovely colour that tones with my skin. (Xena prefers something unobtrusive, and the colour has advantages should anybody catch a glimpse.)

Here's both devices together:

 
(Permanent Chastity Device, Left.)

The snap-in rivets/buttons are tough, and made of the same material as the device. When twisted off, the sprue left a small ridge either side of the plug part. I took that down easily enough with a craft knife.


I don't know whether the sprue would have spoiled the fit, but I wasn't going to take any chances!

Talking of which, you'll see that each plug has a little indentation on the top, similar to the Cherrykeeper Permalocker:

Plugs showing indentations. (Droplets are water, not imperfections)

The indentation is there to give a drill bit purchase for when escape is necessary, and also to ensure you are drilling down the centre.

Escaping is going to be a fuss. Surgical nylon grudgingly drills and grinds. Getting out without damaging the device or my manparts will take time to set up, and I'll have to go carefully. It's not something that can happen spontaneously, and certainly not at night or in the throws of passion.

So here's the Doomsday rivet:


The Doomsday Rivet

Getting into the device was harder than normal. The rear hood made for a tighter fit further back, and added to the friction, while the wider base ring was harder to get my testicles through.

I actually managed to "lose" a ball into its body cavity, so it's a good job I did a count before snapping the seal into place.  

A few minutes fiddling and I had everything in place.

The seal snapped into place with a satisfying click! The button countersunk nicely, so there's no way to get a knife in to try to prise the thing out.

Here, behind the cut, is the seal installed:

Saturday, 26 December 2020