Ooh, nice idea! I experimented with shaking the liquid and never allowing the granules of oxyclean to rest on them etc. but with no change. But next time I’ll be sure to try this!
So you basically take off the first layer, allowing the Oxy to work its magic again on "fresh" rubber? What’s the timetable roughly, and how many cycles of this do you go through? What end result does it produce? Similar to the stems that clean up on the first go?
It all depends on the initial level of oxidation. My soaks have varied from as little as one hour to as many as 4-5 hours. In my personal experience, the vulcanite used by Danish factory pipes (Danpipe, Stanwell & similars) in the '60s and '70s turns green a lot quicker than many of the British factory pipes from the '50s and '60s. Nevertheless, please take that with a grain of salt as purely anecdotal-- I have no empirical proof of this, just firsthand experience only.
Therefore, you just have to experiment with your own stems to figure out what works best. Sometimes, after the initial soak, the warm water rinse will yield significantly noticeable results, where you can see the stem actually darkening as you rub it under the water. In other cases, you may notice very little change.
In the end, I view it as somewhat akin to cleaning the corroded terminals on a car battery-- you can pour a little Coca-cola on them or a bit of baking soda solution, and it will soften things up, but in the end you'll still have to do a bit of scraping with a wire brush to bring the whole thing up to snuff.
I am by no means an expert on the subject, but I've developed a method that works for me for even the ugliest oxidation. Essentially it's oxy-bath (multi-stage if needed), a bit of magic eraser, #0000 steel wool with Compact Disc scratch remover/polish, followed by a light-pressure dry buff at low speed with a felt Dremel wheel, followed by a felt Dremel wheel loaded with green dremel polishing compound, next is a final buff with a soft dry cloth dremel buffer wheel, and finally food grade mineral oil or Decatur No-Ox oil. LOTS of good old-fashioned elbow grease and patience throughout.
I don't always strive for that flawless mirror finish; sometimes it is achieved, and sometimes I just want them back to a clean black with a smooth satin-esque finish. It depends on the pipe, and how much time I have on my hands.
I don't have an arbor or bench grinder/buffer, since I don't do this for a living or for resale-- it's just keeping my own pipe collection to my personal liking. My collection runs around 130 pipes in size, 60% of which are estate pieces. I just developed this method over the years by experimenting on cheap, ugly estate lots that I would find on Ebay back in the day.
Wish I had a before-after for this one, but I just did the pipe pictured below a few days ago, it was only moderately green, and a single oxy soak was all that was needed-- an Amphora X-tra that I recently purchased for around $15 on Ebay. I'm quite satisfied with the results.

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