Pipe'n Prof
Well-known member
- Joined
- Apr 27, 2013
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- 141
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- 502
So about a year ago I got so tired of the maintenance required of vulcanite stems that I traded my entire collection of old Dunhill LB pipes (about 12 if I remember correctly) to Smoking Pipes for store credit. With that credit I decided to buy 14 high end Savinellis (punto oros and giubileo d’oros) with acrylic stems. I liked the idea of the Savinelli 101 shape, so I snapped up four of them in various finishes. It is a stocky billiard like a Dunhill LB. These higher end Savinellis all claimed to have hand cut stems, and upon first inspection checked all the boxes for me (I could live with the sloppy duckbill stems as long as they weren’t vulcanite).
Before I made the trade, I did a lot of research on Savinelli’s higher end pipes. Sykes, SP’s owner, posted in another forum that as far as standard shapes go that Savinelli pipes ranked in the following order in terms of aesthetic perfection (ie, free of fills and blemishes);
Giubeo D’oro
Punto Oro Classic
Punto Oro Gold
Prices follow accordingly. A new Giubeo D’oro runs about $550. A new PO classic about $330. And a new PO Gold about $250.
In my mind, these are all high-end pipe prices (I know that’s open for interpretation). For those prices, I expect a high end pipe free of fills, imperfections, and drilled perfectly.
One year later, here’s my report. As some of you may know, as you smoke a pipe it darkens and fills become visible. I can say that my Giubileo D’Oros do not have fills. But all my Punto Oros do! The Punto Oro Golds all have medium to large fills. The Punto Oro Classics (a $330 pipe mind you) all have multiple small fills. I’ve attached a photo of one below.
When I was doing my research on this brand, I would have loved to read a review like this from another smoker. It would have completely dissuaded me from the brand. A $300 pipe with fills?!?! No way in my book.
All the pipes smoke wonderfully, but I would have been better off just trading for lower end Savinellis in the $100 range. They all have fills unless you are going to pony up for the $550 Giubileo D’oro.
Hopefully this post can prevent someone else from making the same mistake I did. I’d love to press rewind on that trade now.
Before I made the trade, I did a lot of research on Savinelli’s higher end pipes. Sykes, SP’s owner, posted in another forum that as far as standard shapes go that Savinelli pipes ranked in the following order in terms of aesthetic perfection (ie, free of fills and blemishes);
Giubeo D’oro
Punto Oro Classic
Punto Oro Gold
Prices follow accordingly. A new Giubeo D’oro runs about $550. A new PO classic about $330. And a new PO Gold about $250.
In my mind, these are all high-end pipe prices (I know that’s open for interpretation). For those prices, I expect a high end pipe free of fills, imperfections, and drilled perfectly.
One year later, here’s my report. As some of you may know, as you smoke a pipe it darkens and fills become visible. I can say that my Giubileo D’Oros do not have fills. But all my Punto Oros do! The Punto Oro Golds all have medium to large fills. The Punto Oro Classics (a $330 pipe mind you) all have multiple small fills. I’ve attached a photo of one below.
When I was doing my research on this brand, I would have loved to read a review like this from another smoker. It would have completely dissuaded me from the brand. A $300 pipe with fills?!?! No way in my book.
All the pipes smoke wonderfully, but I would have been better off just trading for lower end Savinellis in the $100 range. They all have fills unless you are going to pony up for the $550 Giubileo D’oro.
Hopefully this post can prevent someone else from making the same mistake I did. I’d love to press rewind on that trade now.