Yeap, my fault. I mean the chamber. So, nothing to worry about?The bowl or chamber? If the tobacco chamber, not at all.
Yeap, my fault. I mean the chamber. So, nothing to worry about?The bowl or chamber? If the tobacco chamber, not at all.
I have wondered about that.I've been told that it draws out the natural oils in the wood and weakens it, making it more susceptible to cracking.
This. The salt alcohol treatment is very benign. On rare occasions I have had to do it as many as three times. I don’t advise the alcohol retort treatment unless you are very sure you can do It safely. I have done it with no issues, but always with some trepidation, since I am a klutz.It's interesting to hear the S/A method referred to as "drastic". When i was getting into buying estates it was just one of the things we did with an estate pipe that had excessive mustiness or a pronounced ghost. It does an OK job of removing rancid oils, though not as much as a boiling alcohol retort flush.
I've done both of these a number of times with newly acquired estates. The retort flush is more drastic, but it really cleans out rancid oils all throughout the chamber and airway. Also, there are other methods, like packing the chamber with charcoal and baking the stummel, or sending the pipe out for an ozone treatment.
Unless the wood on a pipe is very dried out, the S/A treatment shouldn't cause any issues, but it can crack a very dried out old pipe.
I only use these treatments when I'm first cleaning up an old estate that I've just bought, or occasionally neutralizing a pipe that I'm going to sell or gift. Otherwise I use standard cleaning methods.
Not a myth. Speaking from personal experience. Fortunately the damage was minimal.Also if it gets on the finish it’s not the end of the world. That’s another myth to keep pipe smokers on the edge of their seat.
Could've just been the age. I had an unsmoked 1912 KB&B shank split on the first smoke, no alcohol involved.I have wondered about that.
Only pipe that ever cracked on me was an estate with extremely clogged mortise which I had to treat extensively with alcohol soaked cleaners and swabs. It developed a crack all along the shank on the first smoke.
What really hurt was not so much that it was a 1922 Loewe, but the 3-4 days it took me to clean it out. ?
Been using alcohol for three decades with no issue. A burning ember is going to do more damage to wood than alcohol.I've been told that it draws out the natural oils in the wood and weakens it, making it more susceptible to cracking.
A mere fraction of what boiling the briar blocks for several days would - which is how they are processed at the mill...I've been told that it draws out the natural oils in the wood
Don’t be retorted.The idea of using an alcohol retort spooks me out ?