A few years ago, out of the blue, an old tobacconist boss of mine sent me two cripples: a Caminetto 192 Business and a Dunhill Shell group 3 billiard. Both have cracked shanks. The Dunhill has a deep, great blast, and it had been smoked hard. The Dunhill is an English tobacco maestro. I can't get a bad smoke out of it, and while I like slightly larger pipes, it always seems to be the perfect size when it is the chosen one. It was the first pipe I thought of as I was reading GL Pease's piece on the elusive perfect smoke (anyone have a title and link on that?). The Caminetto is my best all-around smoker. No matter what I put in it, it delivers on flavor, coolness, and all the other factors you hope out of a pipe. Neither crack has greatened over the years, but the caution I feel is necessary is sometimes a big drawback. I avoid stress at all cost, so the fact that these both bring that bit of tension can bother me at times. I like to take care of my stuff, so it isn't that I want to beat on these pipes. Now that they surprisingly anchor my rotation, I don't want to have to deal with repairing them.
I don't know if both these pipes were owned by the same person or what tobaccos were smoked out of them before they came into my possession. I know nothing of their history or travels. I only know, maybe by pure blissful coincidence, that they came to me at the same time and have both proven to be top shelf smokers. The only cripples I own, too.