One thing I don't see discussed very often is consistency.
A delay spray can work amazingly one night, but if it feels completely different the next time you use it, it's hard to build confidence in it.
For me, consistency isn't about lasting the longest.
It's about knowing roughly what to expect every time.
Here's how I'd rank the sprays I've personally tried based on how predictable they felt after multiple uses.
|
Rank |
Product |
Consistency |
Why |
|---|---|---|---|
|
#1 |
EjaGuard |
★★★★★ |
Gradual effect, easy to repeat once you find your routine. |
|
#2 |
Promescent |
★★★★☆ |
Very reliable when timing and dose stay the same, but slightly less forgiving if you overdo it. |
|
#3 |
P.Y.T. Balm |
★★★★☆ |
Strong once you figure it out, though application can be less consistent than sprays. |
|
#4 |
Trojan |
★★★☆☆ |
Mild and forgiving, but sometimes felt too subtle depending on how sensitive I was that day. |
|
#5 |
Stud 100 |
★★☆☆☆ |
Powerful, but for me the gap between "not enough" and "too much" was small, so results varied more than I'd like. |
1. EjaGuard
Once I figured out the right timing and dose, this was easily the most consistent spray I tested. The effect wasn't dramatic, but that actually worked in its favor. I rarely had sessions where it suddenly felt much stronger or weaker than expected. It didn't completely eliminate sensitivity, but it consistently took the edge off enough to make everything feel more manageable. Because the effect builds gradually, I also found it much easier to repeat the same routine every time without constantly second-guessing whether I'd used too much or too little.
2. Promescent
Promescent was also very reliable once I found my ideal routine. The effect kicked in fairly consistently, and I could usually predict how it was going to feel before things even started. The only reason I ranked it slightly lower is that I found it less forgiving if my dosing wasn't quite right. One extra spray could noticeably reduce sensation, while one spray less sometimes wasn't quite enough. When everything lined up, though, it was one of the most dependable products I tried.
3. P.Y.T. Balm
P.Y.T. was probably the hardest product to learn at first, but once I understood how much to apply and how long to leave it on, the results became surprisingly repeatable. I knocked it down a spot because it's a balm rather than a spray, so I found application a little less precise. Small differences in how much I applied seemed to affect the outcome more than with pump sprays. Even so, once I developed a routine, I rarely had completely unpredictable sessions.
4. Trojan Extended Pleasure
Trojan was interesting because it was consistent in a different way. I never had a session where it suddenly felt overwhelmingly strong or left me too numb. The downside was that it also felt fairly mild every time. On days when my sensitivity was higher than usual, it sometimes felt like I needed an extra spray to get the same level of control. That made it a little harder to rely on compared to the products above, even though it was generally easy to use and fairly forgiving.
5. Stud 100
Stud 100 was the least consistent product for me personally, mostly because the margin for error felt so small. One spray didn't seem to do enough, but adding another could quickly push things into numb territory. I spent more time adjusting dosage with this spray than any of the others, and I never felt completely confident that I'd get the exact same experience from one session to the next. It clearly works, especially if you need a stronger effect, but I found it much less predictable than the rest of the list.
Biggest takeaway
After trying all of these, I've realized consistency has less to do with how strong a product is and more to do with how forgiving it is.
A spray that's slightly weaker but behaves almost the same every time ends up giving me far more confidence than one that's incredibly strong but difficult to fine-tune.
That's just been my experience though.
I'd be curious how everyone else would rank these if consistency—not maximum delay—was the only thing that mattered.
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