Pipe Chamber Rebuild

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craig61a

Lifer
Apr 29, 2017
6,643
58,990
Minnesota USA
I “rebuilt” the chambers on a few estates I have.

A 1996 Peterson XL02 Sterling Silver and a Savinelli 610 Churchwarden. The Pete was over reamed, thus moving the draft hole to the back of the chamber. The Savinelli had a chamber that was charred and rough from possibly reckless use of a jet lighter.

I have done this with a number of pipes I own. Estates I pick up on the cheap that are cosmetically good looking, but have chambers in rough shape.

This allows for a better smoke as the tobacco in the chamber burns down through the column instead of towards the back of the chamber leaving a soggy, troublesome mass of tobacco towards the bottom front of the chamber. I can smoke the the whole column of tobacco all the way down towards the bottom of the chamber effortlessly.

Once the repair has dried, I shape the chamber using a bullet shaped grinding stone. Slow grinding produces the best results. Spinning the stone at high speed tends to gum up the stone.

I have pipes that I have accomplished this repair on that are still smoking like new with no issues years later…

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