whiderwarde
Active member
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2011
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I'm not sure if this is a comment or a question. I suppose it's a realization with an eye to engender further comments from my fellows.
I'm a finicky sort of person. Thus, when learning to smoke a pipe and hearing 1) cake build-up is essential to protect your briar and 2) the ole dime's-width rule, I developed a rather fussy approach to carbon cake. Nothing harsher than a folded pipe cleaner would ever touch the inside of the bowl. Maybe sandpaper when necessary, just so a tamper could fit down the bowl (I have small pipes, mostly Beos).
Result: lumpy cakes full of air holes like lava rock and very brittle. I had many instances of pieces breaking off and leaving a gap in the cake which seemed to go right down to the briar.
Then I saw the Smokingpipes.com estate restoration videos. The employees over there (trustworthy pipers all) scrape out the inside of the bowl with sharp metal objects and a surprisingly audible noise. Some serious wrist-torque was evident. So, I thought, maybe my kid gloves were ill-advised. The estate Beo I just received from them last week had no cake to speak of and smoked like all good Beos do--that is, well.
Off came the kid gloves and I took the spoon end of my pipe tool to one of my older Beos. I scraped it down to a very thin layer, and with no appearance of the damage I had previously imagined.
What do you all think? I can't imagine that carbon cake is supposed to be the brittle, pocked, and crusty stuff I was getting previously in my pipes.
Comments on kid gloves?
I'm a finicky sort of person. Thus, when learning to smoke a pipe and hearing 1) cake build-up is essential to protect your briar and 2) the ole dime's-width rule, I developed a rather fussy approach to carbon cake. Nothing harsher than a folded pipe cleaner would ever touch the inside of the bowl. Maybe sandpaper when necessary, just so a tamper could fit down the bowl (I have small pipes, mostly Beos).
Result: lumpy cakes full of air holes like lava rock and very brittle. I had many instances of pieces breaking off and leaving a gap in the cake which seemed to go right down to the briar.
Then I saw the Smokingpipes.com estate restoration videos. The employees over there (trustworthy pipers all) scrape out the inside of the bowl with sharp metal objects and a surprisingly audible noise. Some serious wrist-torque was evident. So, I thought, maybe my kid gloves were ill-advised. The estate Beo I just received from them last week had no cake to speak of and smoked like all good Beos do--that is, well.
Off came the kid gloves and I took the spoon end of my pipe tool to one of my older Beos. I scraped it down to a very thin layer, and with no appearance of the damage I had previously imagined.
What do you all think? I can't imagine that carbon cake is supposed to be the brittle, pocked, and crusty stuff I was getting previously in my pipes.
Comments on kid gloves?