Oral B Electric Toothbrushes vs Sonicare Electric Toothbrushes

Electric toothbrushes are scientifically demonstrated to remove more plaque than manual toothbrushes. They are less difficult to use as they supply the brushing action for you, and can have many additional features to optimise brushing and give you dentist clean teeth. There are numerous types of electric toothbrush on the market so it should be straightforward to get a brush that fits your oral health wants. The 2 best selling brands, Oral-B and Sonicare have a selection of electric brushes at varying costs that have some different features. So which is better, an Oral B or Sonicare Electrical Toothbrush?

Braun Oral-B range retails from £44.99 to £169.99 and has electrical toothbrushes with circular brush heads that rotate with an oscillating motion. The premium brushes have numerous modes for delicate teeth, massaging of gums and whitening of tarnished teeth. Pressure sensors tell the user when they are brushing with too much force and may damage the teeth and gums; the high range brushes have an identifiable pressure sensor that lights up to tell the user to cut back pressure, the lower range brushes make an audible sound.

Each brush in the range has a timer so teeth can be brushed to the perfect (dentist recommended) 2-minute brushing time. A quadrant placer function will see the brush stutter each 30 seconds to urge you to head to a different area of the mouth, so achieving ideal cleaning of the entire area.

The entire range is compatible with multiple brush heads so the user can select whichever they like. The more expensive brushes in the range include a brush head holder, lavatory storage unit and a travel case and charger.

The premium range Triumph 5000 is advised by The UK Dental Health Foundation and has received the greatest award of any toothbrush on the market. Its defining feature is the wireless digital Smart Guide unit, that has a Star Reward system to help brushing. The very unique unit gives you a pressure alam, timer, quadrant prompt and ‘replace brush head ‘ indicator and wireless syncs with the toothbrush to give real time feedback on teeth cleaning. The Star Reward system is composed of 5 stars that illuminate one at a time as teeth are brushed, granting with a five star in situation when brushed correctly in the allotted time.

The Philip’s Sonicare range ships from less than twenty pounds to almost two hundred fifty pounds and has electrical toothbrushes with diamond formed brush heads that pulsate from side to side, not with an oscillating movement. The brushes use Philip’s patented sonic cleaning action, which claims to remove more plaque than any other electrical toothbrush. Like the Oral-B range, the more dear brushes have numerous sensitive, massaging and bleaching modes to look after teeth and gums, but the range does not include the advanced pressure sensor technology. Sonicare electrical toothbrushes have timers for comprehensive mouth cleaning, and the quadrant placer, where the toothbrush will stutter to tell the user to head to a different area of the mouth. The interchangeable brush heads are not compatible with different brushes in the range so particular heads must be acquired for each type. Philips is developing a new ecologically friendly brush head but this is still in production. The costliest brush in the range, the Sonicare Diamond Clean, is significantly costlier than its Oral-B opposite number but lasts for a magnificent 3 weeks when charged, has a particularly modern slim design and features a stylish glass charger and USB travel case/charger.

If you found this article handy, you may want to check out our blog “Best Electric Toothbrush Reviews. There you can find everything you'll need from the newest Philips Electric Toothbrush reviews like the Oral B Pro Care 1000.

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