Now, the Tundra is basically my only beef with Brigham: they're very low quality compared to their other lines. Shitty stain, and mine even came with a pit.
My only Brigham is an oldie, around 67-ish, and I've also had the frustrating experience of a stuck insert. I like the concept, whether it actually makes a difference I can't be sure. It's nice to get the lube tip, thanks!Try a tiny tad of mineral oil or vaseline on the contact surfaces of the filters prior to installing.
I picked up a Trypis acorn in the very sale you mentioned! Great pipe and I really like his bold rustication technique.If I still had room on my racks for a Canadian made pipe, I think I'd go for a Blatter and Blatter from Montreal or an estate pipe by Philip Trypis (sp?), though his rustication is not subtle. For a while, there was a Forums member who offered several of his new pipes for sale every week, and SP had quite a run of unsmoked Trypis pipes in their estate section about a year ago. I think his acorn was the most distinct, and his prices were moderate.
I also use the phrase " Gear down big rig" with success.
“Lighten up, Francis” is my go to and bonus points when people get the reference.I like "Simmer down, pot roast".
I even say it to myself sometimes.
I also use the phrase " Gear down big rig" with success.“Lighten up, Francis” is my go to and bonus points when people get the reference.
Well, being a bit OCD, I'd be inclined to sit back with a glass of wine or Brandy, and think about it. If that happened to me, I'd get a drill bit and very gently enlarge the whatever section that was giving the grief.I have given up on the Brigham proprietary filter and Brigham pipes. I bought two new Brigham pipes at the same time that take these filters and could not get the filters out of the stem after just one smoke. Maybe when Brigham pipes were made in Canada instead of Europe the filters/pipes worked better. Had to send both pipes back after trying all kinds of remedies to remove the filters from the stem. I gave up. I have no time or patience for such nonsense. Horrible design. ‘Tried contacting Brigham directly. Result? Not even the courtesy of a reply. I will stand clear of of anything with the Brigham name on it from now on. Stick to pipe brands you can trust like Peterson, Savinelli etc.
Apparently the stuck filter problem is with the cheaper Italian-made Brigham pipes made by Lorenzetti. SmokinPipes is blowing them out for as little as $43. The more expensive Brigham pipes made in France are supposedly a lot better and start in the low $100’s. Buyer beware!! Until all this gets solved I would avoid Brigham pipes altogether.
The filters wash out fairly well in a strong solution of Bicarb soda.I feel you on this one. A few months ago, I purchased my first Brigham and loved it (an Italian made Tundra Shape 29--Author.)
I liked it so much, that I decided that I wanted more in my collection and bought three more-- all Italian made-- a Rhodesian, a poker, and a Canadian. They all smoke like a dream, but every now and then, the distillator gets stuck in the Rhodesian and the poker (both are the Algonquian line.)
I couldn't figure it out. Most of the time they are fine, but every so often the distillator gets stuck and I have to pull it out with pliers (I did ruin one distillator.) I knew this wasn;t right, but I wanted to try to fix it on my own because I love the look of the pipes.
I read on Reddit that someone took a 3/16" drill bit and slowly twisted it inside and it pulled out a bur. So I tried it on both pipes and removed a bur in both stems. They seem to be fine, at least so far.
I know this is a problem with Brigham and they are trying to get it fixed. I also think it's bogus that their quality control is allowing these pipes to be sent out and sold.
Hopefully, I managed to fix mine. But sending them back was probably the right thing to do. If this drill bit trick did fix it, I'll probably still buy more of the modern Brighams. I like them enough to kind of focus my ever growing collection on the brand.
Yeah I just dedicated mine to Burley’s no filter great draw , smokes cool, just said the hell with it after a few needle nose sessions and gross wet splintery filtersIs it possible that the problem has more to do with the distillators than the pipes? I have no idea but it seems like quality control could be less rigorous for the filters than the pipes themselves.
* I only own one Brigham - it is Canadian made and has never been used with a filter