I leave a lot of bowls to be finished later, so when I pick up any pipe I check to see how much is left. It's always white-ish. Not white, but off-white to gray. There's probably a Pantone number for each shade of white.
Cigars (proper, non-flavoured ones) do not have additives.That may be the case with additives, however you can get a dark ash with tobacco that contains no additives or flavoring. So maybe additives and flavoring change the color of ash, but you can get dark ash without them.
Your post reminded me a guy I know. He is a serious petrolhead, he has a few cars, all in impeccable, better than showroom condition (one of them a spectacular Mazda MX5, another is a 1970s Alfa spider, another a 1990s Alfa Brera) with extended modifications in interior, sound systems, as well as engine, breaks, transmission - everything, but not kitch or aggressive. He painstakingly researches routes down to the angle of each bend etc, and often books time on tracks to drive. He drives only alone, and only in perfect conditions. Is it enjoyable? His cars sit for weeks or months at a time…For me, smoking a pipe is not a competition, real or imagined. White ash? I don't give it a thought. A gurgle now and then? Never a bother. Need to relight? I just apply a flame and get about my business. I do get it that some pipe smokers enjoy striving for the "perfect bowl." I simply want a reasonably enjoyable bowl smoldering nicely while I work or relax.
Yep, that little thumbs up thing should be brown not blue!I do. It's a health thing. At my age a lookout for blood in the stool and urine is simply a good health practice. So, says my MD and I find I agree with him. He's not happy with the smoking but, on that subject we agree to disagree.
Some swear by fine white ash. Others say that fine white ash a myth.
I have been getting fine white ash quite consistently when I look at the pipe. However, when I dump the bowl, mixed with the dottle, it no longer looks white.
So at the end of the bowl, I took two pictures (Before and after tamping). Looks like fine white ash to me. What do you say?
Pipe: Sasieni Eight Dot Reigate
Tobacco: Watch City Simply Red
View attachment 141497View attachment 141498
That suggests drying the Capstan a bunch more. Then you'll get a fine white-ish ash!With eg RM's Scottish Cake, usually a fine white ash at the bottom. With eg yellow (Gold) Capstan, usually an unsmokable wet dottle. That's it, for me.
Thanks but I have 'only' smoked a few kilos of the Scottish, wet or dry and Capstan has been my daily for many years. It is the tobacco itself or whatever 'chemicals' they cased or topped it with, which makes the difference. For me. Besides, smoking to the bottom seldom fits with my cravings and I don't smoke to finish a bowl. Maybe a milder, drier, faster burning tobacco/casing/cut will more often result in less dottle. I dunno. But try both, wet or dry and you will quickly experience the difference.That suggests drying the Capstan a bunch more. Then you'll get a fine white-ish ash!
Your anecdote, and this forum in general is just a reminder that everyone has a different angle on what about their hobby is personally important to them...some people are obsessed with the potassium content of the soil their tobacco was grown in (fine white ash comes from a high potassium content, sorry if someone pointed it out already, I think I skipped page 2) and other people feel the need to keep a spreadsheet for their cellar contents, still others have a cellar which would comfortably double their lifespan...Your post reminded me a guy I know. He is a serious petrolhead, he has a few cars, all in impeccable, better than showroom condition (one of them a spectacular Mazda MX5, another is a 1970s Alfa spider, another a 1990s Alfa Brera) with extended modifications in interior, sound systems, as well as engine, breaks, transmission - everything, but not kitch or aggressive. He painstakingly researches routes down to the angle of each bend etc, and often books time on tracks to drive. He drives only alone, and only in perfect conditions. Is it enjoyable? His cars sit for weeks or months at a time…
I was just about to say that if you find that the best for you is something that burns to a fine white ash. Keep up with that. If not then who cares. But if those are the blends that just keep doing it for you, then obviously what ever quality that makes the fine white ash is something that agrees with those people.Your anecdote, and this forum in general is just a reminder that everyone has a different angle on what about their hobby is personally important to them...some people are obsessed with the potassium content of the soil their tobacco was grown in (fine white ash comes from a high potassium content, sorry if someone pointed it out already, I think I skipped page 2) and other people feel the need to keep a spreadsheet for their cellar contents, still others have a cellar which would comfortably double their lifespan...
I get a mouthful of ash more often than I care for.