Reading through all the suggestions gives me some hope. This condition has shown up on one, and only one, of my pipes....on my favorite pipe, of course. All my other pipes, are fine.
Thirty years ago, I designed an extra-large/jumbo size, pipe, and had it custom-made. The pipe turned out perfectly, and I sure did get my money's worth! Smoked that custom job for 10-15 years, and then lost interest in piping, and stored that pipe, in a special velvet bag, in a special wooden box, in a special drawer, until just recently. I'm smoking it again. The pipe looks just as good as the day it was made....except the perfect fit at the shank/stem interface has opened up by a few thousandths of an inch, and when held up to a light source, I can see a tiny space at the interface where no space existed before. This tells me only one thing.....the shank/briar has shrunk at that interface, and opened up a slight clearance where stem-face meets shank-face. Plastic-Acrylic/Delrin stems can't shrink. Wood can. Briar is wood.
The only things I am willing to do:
1- Live with it. Best option. or...
2- Look for gunk in the mortise (not likely( and/or try to shorten the Delrin tenon by a few thousandths, and see if this will allow the joint to lock up properly. This would be only a "last resort" remedy, and I have little confidence that this will work. Why? Because I think.... (see No. 3)
3- If the shank has shrunk, and the interface is no longer square....no amount of cleaning of the shank or sanding of the Delrin tenon will fix this interface. Only a lathe will help....and those critical, precision, joint-interfaces will have to be re-machined/re-cut. Good luck with that! That's a job I will not do, and is best left to professionals. I'll pass.
The pipe-carver, who originally made this pipe, machined chamfers/fillets in all the proper areas and was/is an expert machinist, so I know that interface was tight when the pipe was fabricated. I notice these kind of things.
I am inclined, with great reluctance, to attempt to fix this problem, but I know by experience, that things can go downhill fast if the wrong remedies are tried. I'm praying that some gunk has collected at the bottom of the tenon hole...but I truly doubt it. The pipe was stored for 20 years, and stored clean. Where did the gunk come from? My gut tells me the shank changed dimensions, or shrunk away from the stem by a couple of thousandths. Hence, the tiny crack of daylight.
Hey....wood changes dimensions.... doors stick, chairs creak, panels crack, tight fits loosen over time. Why should Briar behave any differently?
After sitting in a drawer for 20 years, I'd open up some clearances too.
Frank
NYC
Pipe-Carvers....please help:
Upon further reflection, I remain a bit confused. Let me explain. Let's assume that the shank/stem interface has changed dimensionally over time and the shank has shrunk, become out-of-square. Here's where it gets confusing. The shank (briar) remains at the original diameter, at this critical joint, and there is no measurable difference in diameter between the shank and the plastic stem, yet a space has opened at the interface joint? So the briar has shrunk/pulled away away from the interface in only one direction? Briar has no grain. It's a burl. It's wood. And wood with a grain structure, like oak/pine, shrinks mostly across the grain... and the length remains almost the same over time, when compared to the width. If briar is gonna shrink it will shrink in all directions....it has no conventional grain structure. The shank should have also become smaller in diameter than the stem. Presumably, briar is also seasoned before it is carved into a pipe and should be dimensionally stable. See the problem?
Bored yet?
Frank
NYC