I didn’t do a “step by step” pictorial, but this evening I fixed my Ropp J07 that suffered a catastrophic event Tuesday.


I decided to give installing a stainless sleeve a go, and measured everything up. I had .4” to chamber on the bowl piece, and .6” inch of space from shank break to mortise on the other side,
After receiving my 3/16” od stainless tubing from Amazon, I freehand drilled .38” on the bowl piece and .55” inch by hand with a 13/64 bit.
I cut a .9” piece of tubing, roughed up the outer surface and dressed the ends. After putting a section of pipe cleaner semi saturated with butcher block conditioner in bore oftube to keep epoxy from getting in airway, some two part expoxy was mixed up. A light coat to exterior of tube and interior of voids was applied and everything reassembled.
For wasn’t perfect, but that was from freehanding the drilling.
After it setup, I cleaned excess glue from exterior (which I wiped with mineral oil prior to avoid any epoxy from getting buggered on the outside).
I wet sanded the slightly uneven joint from 320 to 600 grit.
This is where I made the rookie mistake of worrying about stamping and didn’t keep shank lines true in a spot or two.
I stained it with some cut Feiblings dark brown until it was close enough, cleaned it up and rubbed in a few coats of Howard’s BBC (an emulsion of mineral oil, beeswax, and caranauba wax.
Good enough for the work pipe it is, and a nice learning project.




Thanks to all the folks that share their expertise so rank amateurs like me can muddle our way through stuff!


I decided to give installing a stainless sleeve a go, and measured everything up. I had .4” to chamber on the bowl piece, and .6” inch of space from shank break to mortise on the other side,
After receiving my 3/16” od stainless tubing from Amazon, I freehand drilled .38” on the bowl piece and .55” inch by hand with a 13/64 bit.
I cut a .9” piece of tubing, roughed up the outer surface and dressed the ends. After putting a section of pipe cleaner semi saturated with butcher block conditioner in bore oftube to keep epoxy from getting in airway, some two part expoxy was mixed up. A light coat to exterior of tube and interior of voids was applied and everything reassembled.
For wasn’t perfect, but that was from freehanding the drilling.
After it setup, I cleaned excess glue from exterior (which I wiped with mineral oil prior to avoid any epoxy from getting buggered on the outside).
I wet sanded the slightly uneven joint from 320 to 600 grit.
This is where I made the rookie mistake of worrying about stamping and didn’t keep shank lines true in a spot or two.
I stained it with some cut Feiblings dark brown until it was close enough, cleaned it up and rubbed in a few coats of Howard’s BBC (an emulsion of mineral oil, beeswax, and caranauba wax.
Good enough for the work pipe it is, and a nice learning project.




Thanks to all the folks that share their expertise so rank amateurs like me can muddle our way through stuff!








