I don’t believe anyone believes or is arguing that the above pipes are defective: However, the argument can not be made that they represent a significant level of quality comparable to “high end“ pipes. A stepped stem not withstanding, quality is measured in terms of fitment, material perfection, finish, and design as well as other variables Such as drilling and bit to stem finish. A lower quality pipe can and many times is highly functional and capable of delivering a high quality smoke. I think you may be confusing functionality with quality. Marxman pipes are highly functional. They are not high quality. Does that possibly clarify the misconception many perceive in your argument?
I don’t believe anyone believes or is arguing that the above pipes are defective: However, the argument can not be made that they represent a significant level of quality comparable to “high end“ pipes. A stepped stem not withstanding, quality is measured in terms of fitment, material perfection, finish, and design as well as other variables Such as drilling and bit to stem finish. A lower quality pipe can and many times is highly functional and capable of delivering a high quality smoke. I think you may be confusing functionality with quality. Marxman pipes are highly functional. They are not high quality. Does that possibly clarify the misconception many perceive in your argument?
Marxman pipes were every one expensive. So were Lees, and Kaywoodies, and Webers, and let’s also count LHS Sterncraft.
If that $7 pipe had a Lee, Marxman, Kaywoodie, Weber or LHS it wouldn’t be $7.
Out of the 30 million briar pipes a year made and sold in the USA 75 years ago in 1949 a lot of them were a dollar or less.
Few marked Algerian briar were cheapies.
Nor Lovats with stepped, tapered stems.
This is to help sort out the bottom end of the used pipes on eBay.