Are Certain Style Of Pipes Easier To Smoke To The Bottom?

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Drucquers Banner
Jan 27, 2020
4,002
8,122
I currently only have a Dublin style pipe and find that I often neglect the very last portion of the bowl. I have been pretty lucky with getting a good smoke on with limited re-lights until the last 1/8 or so and coincidentally I feel like I had enough by that point. I would like to add an author or bulldog style next and was wondering if I would waste less tobacco with one of these considering the bowl is more stout in nature but also am concerned they will actually hold more tobacco by volume.
 

F4RM3R

Part of the Furniture Now
Nov 28, 2019
567
2,512
38
Canada
Well it depends on if the draft hole is drilled exactly at the bottom.of the bowl. Sometimes it is a bit above the bottom of the bowl. Shape of pipe doesn't really matter as much I have found.

Also is your tobacco at the bottom kind of soggy? It could also just be tobacco that's too moist or with too much humectants. But if you like it at that moisture then don't worry about burning it to the bottom. Or try drying it out more.
 

Chasing Embers

Captain of the Black Frigate
Nov 12, 2014
43,450
109,397
Bowl shape isn't going to affect anything and chamber shape is up to the smoker. I prefer conical chambers and have nothing but dry, cool smokes with little more than ash left over when I'm finished. Try drying the tobacco more, packing it lighter, lighting it less aggressively, and smoking slower.
 

whsergent

Can't Leave
Jan 8, 2020
385
1,295
Conical bowls concentrate the fire at the end of the bowl i think and maybe burn a little bit better.
Other than that i would say that in my experience if the bowl diameter is too big its going to require more relights.
 
Jan 28, 2018
13,079
137,065
67
Sarasota, FL
Pipes filled with tobacco properly dried and packed, then smoked properly, tend to smoke to the bottom. Smoking to the bottom though is was over rested as building up cake. If the stars are properly aligned and you smoke to the bottom with no additional effort, great. If you empty the pipe and there is some unsmoked dottle, also great. Several variables have to be right simultaneously to smoke a bowl down to a fine ash. It simply doesn't always work out that way.
 

Rebub24

Might Stick Around
Nov 26, 2019
80
135
There are certain shapes that are smaller in dimensions such as a bulldog, prince, or apple which will have a shorter smoking times due to a shallow chamber depth. The two biggest factors are the drilling on the pipe and the dryness of the tobacco, not the shape. Also if you are a wet smoker, moisture can build up at the heel of the chamber causing the tobacco to get wet.

However, you really should have a little bit of burnt/wet tobacco remaining at the end of a bowl. This is known as the dottle and will be charred and blackish looking. Smoking the dottle will usually take multiple relights and when you smoke the dottle regularly, you run the risk of charring the airway of the draft hole.
 
Dublins and conical bowls are my favorite pipes, but it's very rare that I smoke it down to the last grains of tobacco. It happens, but it's not a big deal. We have this whole word for that last little wad of tobacco that is left over, "dottle," and if it were just something that occurred when something goes wrong, we wouldn't have bothered giving it a word of it's own. Dottle happens. Embrace the dottle.
Sucking flame down to that last little bit, or puffing harder to smoke the dottle is most likely going to lead to burning up some of the delicate wood around the draft. There are no rewards for smoking it all down to ash.
 

mso489

Lifer
Feb 21, 2013
41,210
60,459
I find MM cobs delivery the most total burn without going to an ashy or stale taste. I'm sometimes a little surprised -- they won't relight, then I notice that there is nothing left to burn. This occurs with briar pipes too, depending on the pipe and blend. I haven't noticed any "rule" on blends or brands or shape. Some do, some don't.
 

tkcolo

Starting to Get Obsessed
Apr 30, 2018
240
329
51
Granby, CO
I find MM cobs delivery the most total burn without going to an ashy or stale taste. I'm sometimes a little surprised -- they won't relight, then I notice that there is nothing left to burn. This occurs with briar pipes too, depending on the pipe and blend. I haven't noticed any "rule" on blends or brands or shape. Some do, some don't.
Weird. I have the opposite problem. I smoke most briars down to ashes, but cobs I struggle with at the bottom. Too much area around the stem protrusion. I suppose if I did better with a pipe mud filler I wouldn't have those issues.
 

hauntedmyst

Lifer
Feb 1, 2010
4,006
20,751
Chicago
I tried building a micro turbocharger for one of my pipes I couldn’t get to smoke to the bottom using part of the airway as power to instead of scavenged exhaust gases. It worked and smoked to the bottom of the bowl but the tongue bite was horrific and the pipe glowed red hot. I had to throw it in the river.

1582839230561.jpeg
 

jpmcwjr

Moderator
Staff member
May 12, 2015
24,747
27,344
Carmel Valley, CA
Dublins and conical bowls are my favorite pipes, but it's very rare that I smoke it down to the last grains of tobacco. It happens, but it's not a big deal. We have this whole word for that last little wad of tobacco that is left over, "dottle," and if it were just something that occurred when something goes wrong, we wouldn't have bothered giving it a word of it's own. Dottle happens. Embrace the dottle.
Sucking flame down to that last little bit, or puffing harder to smoke the dottle is most likely going to lead to burning up some of the delicate wood around the draft. There are no rewards for smoking it all down to ash.

Yes, dottle can happen, but burning to the bottom of the chamber is a Good Thing®. As long as the taste is fine, and if done gently—as the whole smoke should be— there is no risk of burning the draft hole.

The reward is a longer smoke, but more importantly, a nicely dry pipe.