Acrylic Stems vs Vulcanite Stems: A Comparison

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telescopes

Pipe Dreamer and Star Gazer
Charatan’s Make - from my experience as well as others, used terrible vulcanite. The briar was excellent however. James Upshall could have paid better attention to their stems as well. On the other hand, my first and second generation Lees, older Kaywoodies, and Dunhills all seem to be easy to clean and stay nice and black. My understanding is much of the quality has to do with sulpher content.
 

Bassman65

Part of the Furniture Now
Nov 30, 2022
515
971
Canada
Like them both. Although, as mentioned, vulcanite is more work if you treat it with oils etc. No give with acrylic, but doesn’t usually bother me on most stems. That being said, I have an acrylic stemmed pipe that I do find uncomfortable to clench. It has a really weird kinda rounded bit. Depends on the pipe I guess.

Easiest on the teeth I find are the MM cob plastic stems. They look like a chewed up dog’s breakfast after a while however, so I just replace them. They’re pretty cheap.
 

Roach1

Lifer
Nov 25, 2023
1,421
21,020
Germany
I prefer acrylic for ease. I have pipes also with vulcanite which I myself have sucessfully restored. If I can do it any can. I just used sandpaper and Savinelli stem polish.
 

FLDRD

Lifer
Oct 13, 2021
2,329
9,506
Arkansas
Fellow pipe smokers,

I don’t have the slightest clue when it comes to acrylic vs vulcanite stems, which is why I’m appealing to you fine gentlemen who posses both the knowledge and experience when it comes to both.

I am in shopping mode for a nice briar and so far I am leaning towards a Peterson (yes, I am biased towards Irish pipes 🤣) but my biggest question having never had a vulcanite stem is how well they compare to an acrylic one?

I do apologize in advance but I’ve only started smoking pipes less than 3 months ago and as me mum likes to call me I am a “city boy”.
If you're looking for a Peterson pipe, I'd recommend actually trying their system standard with a P-lip, so you can get the full effect of his creation as intended.
Nearly all of the Peterson estate pipes on smokingpipes will have a vulcanite stem. The new version of the system standard have acrylic P-lip stems.
Hope that helps as you decide.
 

sablebrush52

The Bard Of Barlings
Jun 15, 2013
20,978
50,216
Southern Oregon
jrs457.wixsite.com
I'm agnostic on the topic, with no preference regarding material, just quality of material. As George said, both acrylic and vulcanite stems come in different qualities, with different characteristics. George has made me stems from a high grade acrylic, formulated to have a little "give" that are as comfortable as any of my vulcanite stems, and my vulcanite stems are largely high quality German rod stock.
 

nick24601

Might Stick Around
Jan 19, 2020
52
330
If your getting a p-lip I'd strongly recommend a vulcanite. The acrylic one feels frigging horrible by comparison
 
Jul 28, 2016
8,081
42,793
Finland-Scandinavia-EU
Definitely , stems with High grade vulcanite (Dunhills)are pretty easy in maintenance and are much more prone to oxidation than mediocre regular vulcanite stems.the worst what I have come across are older Savinellis with their vulcanite stems,
 

Sig

Part of the Furniture Now
Jul 18, 2023
514
2,422
Western NY
I MUCH prefer Vulcanite/Ebonite to Acrylic. More comfortable and no clicking clack.
As far as maintenance......

A: I can keep Vulcanite looking good.
B: I don't care if my stem turns brown.
 

Steddy

Lifer
Sep 18, 2021
1,409
24,125
Western North Carolina
You’ll probably end up with both at some point. Then you might have a preference. Then that preference might change.

For me vulcanite is fussy and I deal with enough fussy at work.

I like Cosmic’s idea of wiping with a jewelry cloth. Sounds much easier than the olive oil I use.
 

filmguerilla

Can't Leave
Oct 17, 2022
315
1,938
Memphis, Tennessee
I’m a bit of a Pete geek and would happily trade all my vulcanite stems for acrylic. That said, I’ve only had one vulcanite stem noticeably oxidize and it was an easy restore. Of course, I’m not a clencher, so there’s that…
 

bullet08

Lifer
Nov 26, 2018
10,340
41,823
RTP, NC. USA
I prefer vulcanite stems. It's not that big of a deal, and it's not that big of a difference. But vulcanite is definitely more comfortable. Having said that, it's not a show stopper. But I definitely noticed that I smoke vulcanite more than acrylic.
 

spike

Starting to Get Obsessed
Oct 21, 2009
165
392
I much prefer acrylic, and the best acrylic I’ve come across is the Perspex on old GBDs. They’re a pain in the ass to clean, but very comfortable.
 

Hillcrest

Lifer
Dec 3, 2021
3,793
19,270
Connecticut, USA
Vulcanite is generally more comfortable but requires occasional cleaning and polishing. Acrylic is harder but virtually maintenance free. If its a big bulky stem go with vulcanite. If its a normal or thinner stem go with acrylic. I say that because my Pete Pub pipe acrylic P-Lip stem is a tad bulky and cumbersome while my Vauen Olaf acrylic fishtail stem is thinner and the most comfortable of all of my pipes. Just 2 cents adjusted for current inflation ! Good Luck !
 

Uguccione

Can't Leave
Jan 22, 2024
339
819
Italy
The best stem I own is from an Upshall pipe purchased new on their ebay store about 8 years ago. It's soft like ebonite but after all these years it's still black, shiny and doesn't release any bad taste (the real limit of ebonite).
I still haven't figured out what material it is, it reminds me of the caps of Bic pens that I used to chew at school during lessons.
 
Nov 20, 2022
2,775
27,997
Wisconsin
$.02 - I don't really care, but mildly prefer Acrylic because my eye tooth marks up pipes quickly.

The only stems that cause me any problems and require high maintenance are my Pete's. They discolor very quickly for me. Does anyone else notice this with the Pete's or is it just me?
 

Chasing Embers

Captain of the Black Frigate
Nov 12, 2014
45,238
119,148
it's still black, shiny and doesn't release any bad taste (the real limit of ebonite).
It's all about sulphur content of the rubber. To my knowledge, this patent era Dr. Grabow Linkman's pipe (1930s) has never had oxidation. I've had it for many years now and the stem is still as black as the day I got it.
20200530_195212-1.jpg

Same with this Weber from the 1950s. The stem stamping barely has any damage from the past 70 years.
20241103_134413.jpg20241103_134438.jpg