In my opinion, there is a tendency by new pipe smokers to overdo cleaning and maintenance. If you regularly
clean a pipe with a pipe tool, tissue, and pipe cleaner after each smoke, and buff off the bowl and stem with
a cloth, you may not have to do much more for months or years at a time, depending on how much you smoke
and how many pipes you accumulate. Once you have more than twenty pipes, you aren't going to be working
any of them too hard on a month-to-month basis. If you do all the cleaning, especially wiping out the bowl
every time, and smoothing out the carbon layer that way, you may never have to ream at all. However, if you
itch to get into more rigorous cleaning and upkeep, you may want to get into estate pipe restoration. There's
plenty of information and expertise on that here at Forums. Members do some beautiful work. In that case,
all these skills of reaming pipes, reviving stems, and the rest of it, come into play. And if you can find some
$5 pipes at garage and yard sales and flea markets, you can practice with little risk of expensive harm. You
can maintain your new pipes with light but regular cleaning.