On a smooth bowl, I can wipe it pretty well. This is minor. Worst care, I could use a micro-pad lightly. With rustication, I just cant get any surface to wipe so it stays and will get worse over time.Darkening is tough. Alcohol scrub to remove the stain then a restain is likely the only way. Build-up, that's different, I remove with a worn piece of scotchbrite/water.
BriarBlues used to put bowls down into a saucer with distilled water and let it sit for a few hours, but again, that was primarily for tars build-up.
Yep, smooth pipes are a lot easier.On a smooth bowl, I can wipe it pretty well. This is minor. Worst care, I could use a micro-pad lightly. With rustication, I just cant get any surface to wipe so it stays and will get worse over time.
I have Castello sea rock with a smooth rim. But this other pipe has a rusticated rim...boy did I find out what isn't really a good idea.Yep, smooth pipes are a lot easier.
OK. That sounds like an idea. Thanks!Heat it with a hair drier or cautiously with a heat gun. Then you can get a lot of it off with cotton terry cloth.
That might be the first thing to try. Thanks!I've used a soft bristled tooth brush.
Very helpful thoughts there. I’m talking about something very minor but, because the rustication is complex and delicate, it’s hard to get at and hard scrubbing might actually damage the rustication itself. It’s a bit of a pain.There are more than a few methods that work. Dampening the rim with water and scrubbing. The heat gun method that Briarcutter offered, a paste of baking soda and lemon juice, scrubbing with a stiff tooth brush, or stiff short haired plastic brush etc.
The variables that come into play are .... what type of stain the carver used, is it smoke build up or actual char, how thick the build up is and on and on.
Each rim cleaning is a learning experience. IMHO it is always best to begin with the least intrusive and work your way up. Plus we're all limited by what tools and "ingredients" we have on hand. Over the years I ended up with a tool box full of "items" to make all the refurbishing tasks easier. Specific brushes for non smooth rims, dental picks, various wooden "picks" that watch makers use, and on and on. I'm afraid to count how many different types of reamers and blades I have for tobacco chambers.
Yep, got it.Yo, PipeWorld newcomers
An FYI ---
Member "briarblues" isn't one of you, he just hasn't been around here in a while (and never spent much time on forums to begin with).
At last count he cleaned and sold 49,864,912 pipes.
Per month.
And he did it for many years, starting back when connecting to the Net was a dial-up/landline thing.
Meaning his suggestions are not guesses or passing on stuff he read or heard. He's done it.
LOL, only a slight exaggeration on the number George........ the arthritis in my hands sure feels like I cleaned that many pipes, but I'd honestly guess the number is around 5, maybe 6k.Yo, PipeWorld newcomers
An FYI ---
Member "briarblues" isn't one of you, he just hasn't been around here in a while (and never spent much time on forums to begin with).
At last count he cleaned and sold 49,864,912 pipes.
Per month.
And he did it for many years, starting back when connecting to the Net was a dial-up/landline thing.
Meaning his suggestions are not guesses or passing on stuff he read or heard. He's done it.
