I used some pipe mud yesterday night. Hope it will work.Let it dry for a couple of days and it'll be rock hard. Another option is fireplace mortar.
I used some pipe mud yesterday night. Hope it will work.Let it dry for a couple of days and it'll be rock hard. Another option is fireplace mortar.
Buy these. These are the least expensive high end Missouri Meerschaum pipes. They are larger cobs, better finish, better stems, and hardwood plugs.
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They look nice. I bought the Legend because it has the perfect size for me and takes a 6mm filter. Without the filter the draw is way too open. I tried to pack tighter but then I had to relight all the time or smoke hot. With the filter it has the most perfect draw for me.
Or make friends with artisans.Obviously the smarter move is to buy expensive pipes cheap.
I would say generally, better quality pipes smoke better, but they are not necessarily always more expensive.So, do expensive pipes really smoke better?
That alone could be the beginning of a whole new conversation but the topic is already fully covered by quite a few other threads.Don’t inhale, and you will likely live to die of something else.
Yeah that happened to me once 25 years ago. Never again.Many pipe smokers quit early, because they bought awful pipes and/or tobacco.
We all "need" lees. Just wait. Then you will need a marxman. I've stayed strong yet, but I have spent days/hours looking at both!So much information in this forum. Now I "need" a Lee...
This is the center of my "range". In my opinion, pipes 2or 3x this price, don't get much better. And some have cost more and been worse.There's a lot of joy to be found on the middle shelf, IMO. My most expensive pipe had a purchase price just over $100, and I have a lot of great smokers to choose from.
I always start cheap. That is common logic. I need to see if a new hobby, sport, interest, experience is right for me.
Then I associate with experienced people and become a member of a nice forum and here we go. Forums are a real disaster. They drain your pocket.
Quality aka expensive equipment works better. That is true with all my other activities and in general. Road bikes, road running shoes, mountain running shoes, trekking shoes or boots, fishing rods, airguns, bows, r/c airplanes.
When I started pipe smoking 25 years ago, I bought some basket pipes. I quit shortly maybe because I never had someone to teach me how to smoke.
Now I found this place and, in a few weeks, I bought a MM cob, a Chacom, a Savinelli, a Dunhill, a Radice and a Castello. In that order. I still have the old Fe.ro.
Long story short I almost always reach for the expensive pipes. As a newbie I am not in the position to appreciate and tell which smokes the best but I certainly like the pricey ones much more.
So, do expensive pipes really smoke better?
Depends on the particular pipe. For the most part, any new pipe loses 50% of its value after the first match.On the bright side, Dunhills and Castellos hold their value so they can be considered as an investment.
An "expensive" pipe doesn't smoke better, a well-engineered and executed pipe does. The location of the draft hole in relation to the bottom of the bowl, the size of the draft hole, amount of gap between the stem tenon and the bottom of the mortise, the shape and depth of the funnel from the button face into the stem, and the pipe materials itself can all affect the smoke.
One hopes that when they purchase an expensive pipe that all these factors are done well, but it’s not a guarantee.
In my opinion, it also depends greatly on the tobacco condition and the smoker's ability to pack and smoke.
Certainly better than new, with very few exceptions, provided that you resell at retail. Selling to a dealer is another 50% drop.Probably I meant that estate used pipes hold their value as the only two expensive pipes I own are estates.
Some people swear off Algerian Briar and its "cinnamon taste" but I for one like it. Nose warmers are a different breed of pipe I tell you. I've never smoked one, but I can’t imagine it’s the greatest smoke out there. I always saw them an interesting novelty pipe. Maybe I should buy one and see. Who doesn’t need another reason to buy a pipe?I’ve heard that and agree to a point.
Trancy Mincer used old Algerian briar that tastes wonderful for Custombilt pipes.
He only made high dollar pipes and construction was excellent, the carving artistic.
But his most popular seller were those super wide squat chubby bulldogs, and to smoke those you’ll need a nose shield to get one lit all around the bowl, then it’s hard to keep lit.
Construction is kind of like plumbing.
You only notice it when it’s really bad.