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Nov 29, 2021
6
11
New Hampshire
Greetings and happy holidays everyone.

Long time lurker, first time poster. First, thank you for the numerous threads of advice and information.

I came to the pipe by way of inheritance. In 2007 my great uncle passed away after a well lived life and I was gifted his pipes by my grandmother. He was a great man, WW2 vet and purple heart recipient, life-long fly fisherman, artist, art instructor, and pipe smoker. He painted a self-portrait of him with his Peterson 314 clenched in his teeth – frowning of course. That Peterson 314 became my favorite pipe and ignited my love for Petes. Although, I’m open to many brands and one of my favorite smokers is a Rossi.

My relationship with pipes has been on and off over the years, but lately I’ve been consistent with my smoking. Trying to develop a proper cadence – I tend to smoke fast – and find tobaccos that give me the kick I crave. I’ve acquired a small collection of “active” pipes – 14 to be exact. Two of those are my great uncles, the 314 and an old, no-name, made in Italy bulldog. His other pipes are for display only.

Unfortunately, I believe I’ve just experienced my first burnout and I can’t tell if it was bad form, a hidden defect, or both. Probably both with emphasis on the form(er). I imagine my great uncle frowning at me for my carelessness. He was very meticulous in his ways and had a way of making you realize you messed up without telling you that you just blew it – directly at least. I remember him doing this on fly fishing and photography trips as a youth. His 314 is from ’62 or earlier, and it smokes beautifully, proof of his level of care.

Anyway, I was enjoying a pipe of some twisted Virginias that I get from my B&M when all the sudden I tasted a woody bitterness. I finished up, inspected the chamber, and noticed what appeared to be charred bits around the airway. After two days rest, I packed it with some Billy Budd but could taste the bitterness of charred wood cut through the Billy Budd’s velvety smoke. I cleaned out the pipe and realized the area to the left of the airway and around it looked charred. I confirmed this by easily scraping the material away and leaving an indentation in the chamber.

The pipe was only a few weeks old so I’m quite disappointed. I think I’ll try some pipe mud on it and see if I can keep it smoking for a while.

Out of curiosity how easy is it to burn a briar pipe even with bad form? I imagine it can’t be too easy but am very self-conscious when smoking now.
 

SBC

Lifer
Oct 6, 2021
1,648
7,770
NE Wisconsin
Boy, I hope that your concern isn't what you think. I couldn't tell you, myself -- I've never experienced that. You're at the right place for answers, though.

I too am in the North Woods, just 1,000 miles west of you.

When I was a kid, my grandparents lived in NH. We loved visiting them, and particularly looked forward to swimming along the Kancamagus Highway.

Welcome to the forum - we're glad that you're here!
 
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cigrmaster

Lifer
May 26, 2012
20,248
57,310
67
Sarasota Florida
Welcome from Florida originally from Boston and I grew up skiing at Mt Sunapee in NH. It was a fun place to ski especially in the sun bowl. The last time I skid there was the last time I ever skid. I took my worst wipe out ever doing around 70 mph. I can still feel the hurt from that wipe out. Once I was done skiing I had no reason to live up north any more so as soon as my dad and his mom passed, I was off to Florida. As it turned out, I beat the hell out of my body playing tennis and now I am wheelchair bound and it sucks.

I miss my tennis and a couple of days of golf per week. I also miss shooting hoops, playing street hockey on the basket ball courts, learning to play bocce ball as we had two courts for that and since I grew up playing shuffle board, I was natural for bocce ball.

The only thing I use now is the pool at the complex I live in. I am paying 805.00 a quarter and wouldn't mind if could play all my sports.
 

mso489

Lifer
Feb 21, 2013
41,211
60,649
Welcome from central N.C. If you've been smoking other pipes without causing a burnout, and you had a burnout with a fairly new pipe, I'd suspect the pipe had a flaw. Burnouts are somewhat rare and are usually caused by a flaw in briar (if it's a briar pipe).
 
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Fralphog

Lifer
Oct 28, 2021
2,180
28,106
Idaho
Howdy and welcome to the forum!
I enjoyed your intro. I recently purchased an estate pipe at an antique shop. It looked fine when I inspected it at the shop?
When I got home, I started cleaning it up. After cleaning and polishing the stem, I focused on cleaning the mortise, draft hole and inside of the bowl. It had some old, crusty cake so I carefully used a pocket knife to scrape it down even and then used some sand paper to smooth it out. While sanding I noticed some “spider webbing “ type damage ?. It’s not super deep but will require repair To be smokable.
image.jpg


I came across the below video on mixing up “pipe mortar” to use. Seems like just the ticket for filling in the fissures and putting a lite coating over the entire bowl.

image.jpg
Here’s the link:

Might work for your pipe?
 
Nov 29, 2021
6
11
New Hampshire
Howdy and welcome to the forum!
I enjoyed your intro. I recently purchased an estate pipe at an antique shop. It looked fine when I inspected it at the shop?
When I got home, I started cleaning it up. After cleaning and polishing the stem, I focused on cleaning the mortise, draft hole and inside of the bowl. It had some old, crusty cake so I carefully used a pocket knife to scrape it down even and then used some sand paper to smooth it out. While sanding I noticed some “spider webbing “ type damage ?. It’s not super deep but will require repair To be smokable.
View attachment 112394


I came across the below video on mixing up “pipe mortar” to use. Seems like just the ticket for filling in the fissures and putting a lite coating over the entire bowl.

View attachment 112395
Here’s the link:

Might work for your pipe?
Thanks for the info. That’s an interesting pipe you found there. I’m going to experiment with some pipe mud and run some experiments.
 
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