How about that - totally forgot until you mentioned it but I have some down in the shop. It's used for hand rubbed wood finishes. I tried the method once and filed it away for future reference, too time consuming for most projects but the right thing for the right one.
People see silicate and think that it's the chemical itself that kills you - it's crystalline silicate dust that does it, so I wouldn't worry much about sodium silicate in a pipe.You we have a guy at our shop who won't smoke a pipe from Denmark because he says they are all lined with this stuff and it could kill you. Christ, we laughed at this guy at said "Name one". He is a good guy, but he occasionally wanders off the reservation.
I even bought a bottle of it several years ago but have been hesitant to ever use it.
Interesting. I'm a Geologist (retired) as well. I was thinking along the same lines.This is a pretty cool material, I had never heard of it before, and initially I was pretty skeptical that there was a water soluble silicate at all (formerly a geologist - silicates are generally not soluble in water unless under high pressure and temperature). Watched a few vids and molten lye is the thing that would do it. All sorts of weird stuff happens at the ends of the pH scale.
This was a very useful thread to read - I was just digging out some of my old pipes inherited from a grandfather and lamenting the nice little meerschaum with a pin hole at the bottom of the bowl. Years of too vigorous cleaning I guess. I think I have nothing much to lose trying a bit of sodium silicate solution and diatomaceous earth to make a fire-clay like putty. Might try some dry clay too if I can find some without buying 50 lbs. Going to be some fun experiments - so glad I saw this thread last month, been thinking about it ever since.
Check out Peterson Pipe Notes for their All Purpose Bowl Coating. It's just activated charcoal and gum arabic. I've bought two new Petersons in the last two months and, with this bowl coating, they have smoked sweet right out of the gate.I'll make this as short as possible.
I have read many threads and some articles that describe the use of Sodium Silicate as a bowl coating, or for repairing bowls used as a pipe mud.
@OSOBUCO
diffusionPerhaps oxygen or other atmospheric gasses migrating through the plastic bottle? That does happen, though I forget the name for it.
Not entirely accurate. Unsmoked briar will dry out and oxidize over time, in the process becoming more vulnerable to cracking on the first bowl. An insulator, which is what the silicate coating offers, along with careful smoking for the first dozen or so bowls of the vintage virgin, will mitigate that risk. It's also useful for old chambers that have developed spider webbing, or heat cracks, not an uncommon feature in antique pipes.Properly smoked, pipes of standard materials don't need a coating at all, so why complicate life by adding something new. It might be fine, but it will never be necessary. Leave off the coatings, don't add new ones.
My interest in this is for the repair of an old meerschaum I would like to continue smoking. It has a pin hole in the bottom of the bowl. If I can't repair it, the pipe is garbage - one has to keep a finger over the hole when drawing, and it makes an annoying gurgling sound due to the dip right before the draw hole in the stem.Properly smoked, pipes of standard materials don't need a coating at all, so why complicate life by adding something new. It might be fine, but it will never be necessary. Leave off the coatings, don't add new ones.
Meerschaum pipes often suffer from overzealous reaming. I once repaired a hole in the bottom of the chamberMy interest in this is for the repair of an old meerschaum I would like to continue smoking. It has a pin hole in the bottom of the bowl. If I can't repair it, the pipe is garbage - one has to keep a finger over the hole when drawing, and it makes an annoying gurgling sound due to the dip right before the draw hole in the stem.
For coating inside a wood bowl I don't really know. The couple vintage briars I've smoked didn't suffer from the problems sablebrush52 mentioned, but I could see it being useful for those cases.
For coating a new bowl one is intending to smoke promptly, I would agree with your statement, likely no need for it.
My interest in this is for the repair of an old meerschaum I would like to continue smoking. It has a pin hole in the bottom of the bowl. If I can't repair it, the pipe is garbage - one has to keep a finger over the hole when drawing, and it makes an annoying gurgling sound due to the dip right before the draw hole in the stem.
For coating inside a wood bowl I don't really know. The couple vintage briars I've smoked didn't suffer from the problems sablebrush52 mentioned, but I could see it being useful for those cases.
For coating a new bowl one is intending to smoke promptly, I would agree with your statement, likely no need for it.
What did you mix it with ?I have a plastic Rayex pipe where a good portion of the pressed Meerschaum lining disintegrated (probably due to a moist, half-smoked bowl of tobacco being left in the chamber fifty years prior)—I was able to patch the missing areas with Plaster of Paris to reconstruct the lining; the pipe is smokable again. You should be able to fill the hole in your pipe and keep smoking it for years to come.
What did you mix it with ?