Drying corn cob pipe in the car

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arthoz

Lurker
Oct 5, 2018
17
1
Is it ok to leave my corn cob pipes in my car glove box during the day to dry up? Just for context, I once left a stick of candle in the glove box and came back to find it in a pool of wax on the floor.

 

haparnold

Lifer
Aug 9, 2018
1,561
2,395
Colorado Springs, CO
I've never tried it myself, but a cob shouldn't be damaged by the heat. Worst case scenario: it somehow gets ruined, and you're out the cost of a new cob. Best case scenario: you find a great new trick.

 
May 9, 2018
1,687
88
Raleigh, NC
One word of advice I'd give is to make sure you let that pipe cool down completely before filling and smoking. I've left mine in the car after only a half bowl, returning at lunch to retrieve it and finish the rest. That was the hottest damn near unpleasant smoke I ever had. The pipe itself was hotter than it was when I smoke it, so that heat transferred over into the tobacco.

 

davek

Part of the Furniture Now
Mar 20, 2014
685
952
I set them in the sun to dry up all the time. Helps a lot if you've smoked one too much. Only thing I would worry about is the plastic.

 

mso489

Lifer
Feb 21, 2013
41,211
60,648
I'm one of these sentimentalists who does not think of cob pipes as disposable. I either buy them with acrylic stems or fit them with Forever stems. The point being that I wouldn't select a cob as a car pipe to bake (on very low heat by oven standards) in the Southern heat during the summer. I'd leave a cob in the car if I parked while traveling, but I wouldn't store it there regularly. I think some of my inexpensive briars would be somewhat more durable, and I'd choose those to live in the car if I needed that. I think pipes do best if they stay in the temperature and humidity zones of the owners as much as possible.

 

wolflarsen

Part of the Furniture Now
Jul 29, 2018
862
2,486
I set them in the sun to dry up all the time. Helps a lot if you've smoked one too much. Only thing I would worry about is the plastic.
I also set them out in the summer sun to freshen them up, however I like to pull the stems off first.

 

arthoz

Lurker
Oct 5, 2018
17
1
Thanks for sharing the information. Someone should make a video on this as "young" pipers like me have tendency towards watching video tutorial than reading stuff off the forums. I guess corn cobs really are tough. Was worried because being a hobbyist bowyer sometimes I over cured my wood stave or bamboo in my car and they cracked.
Here in Malaysia we have tendency of the weather to be extremely hot and humid or hot and wet...occasionally it's cool and floody. I think my cobs feel a bit damp in the evening when the sun is down.
Will take note from carolinachurchwarden to make sure the cobs cool down before a smoking session. I have a feeling that I could successfully roast a chicken in my car if I put my mind to it.

 

lawdawg

Lifer
Aug 25, 2016
1,792
3,812
I also set them out in the summer sun to freshen them up, however I like to pull the stems off first.
+1
I do the same. The first time I ever put some cobs out in the sun, I left the stems in them, and one of the "tenons" on the nicer MM acrylic stems got a bit deformed. It still smokes fine, though I now take the stems off (and leave the stems in the house) before putting the cobs in the sun to avoid possible warping / deforming of the stems.

 
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