Questions About "SilverThing" [Inner Tube] in Dunhill Pipes

Log in

SmokingPipes.com Updates

3 Fresh Bill Shalosky Pipes
120 Fresh Savinelli Pipes
12 Fresh Radice Pipes
24 Fresh Johs Pipes
12 Fresh Winslow Pipes

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

tzinc

Can't Leave
Mar 24, 2021
346
1,395
Toronto
What does the silver thing do? Should I remove it when I smoke will it make any differece?
I doubt they are still being made so eventually I assume it wears out and I will have to smoke without it?
 

tzinc

Can't Leave
Mar 24, 2021
346
1,395
Toronto
are the inner tubes needed? is it just a filter? i don't use filters on my filter pipes like savinelli
 

verporchting

Lifer
Dec 30, 2018
3,006
9,303
It was a big deal when it was patented, intended to provide a cooler drier smoking experience.

They often aren’t present in older pipes and I’ve never used one. They are replaceable if you can find them although I haven’t bothered trying.

Pipe will smoke just fine without them. Enjoy’
 

georged

Lifer
Mar 7, 2013
6,094
16,703
It was a big deal when it was patented, intended to provide a cooler drier smoking experience.

They were actually designed as a cleaning work around.

The type of pipe cleaners we have today hadn't been invented yet, and cleaning a pipe's shank was a PITA for everyone. Even bird feathers were used.

Dunhill's solution? Make the part of the pipe that's the problem "throw away-able".

Each time you went to your B&M for the coming weeks' batch of tobacco, you tossed the old tube and replaced it with a new one.

The idea became an ingenious solution to a non-existent problem after wire cleaners appeared, of course, but old habits die hard + it was a patented "brand identifier" feature, so the company kept on with them anyway.
 

verporchting

Lifer
Dec 30, 2018
3,006
9,303
They were actually designed as a cleaning work around.

The type of pipe cleaners we have today hadn't been invented yet, and cleaning a pipe's shank was a PITA for everyone. Even bird feathers were used.

Dunhill's solution? Make the part of the pipe that's the problem "throw away-able".

Each time you went to your B&M for the coming weeks' batch of tobacco, you tossed the old tube and replaced it with a new one.

The idea became an ingenious solution to a non-existent problem after wire cleaners appeared, of course, but old habits die hard + it was a patented "brand identifier" feature, so the company kept on with them anyway.

I stand corrected. Thanks for providing the best answer georged, I don’t want to add to the internet bad information collection! Lord knows there’s enough out there. I mistakenly repeated what I had read somewhere because I thought it was true. 🤦‍♂️
 
Dec 3, 2021
5,555
48,259
Pennsylvania & New York
The completist collector in me is always grateful when ephemeral, disposable, parts like these tubes are still present; with pipes, it can be these tubes; with toys, the accessories that came with an action figure that were easily lost; with books, maybe a wraparound band that was folded over a dust jacket that announced a new price or award the book garnered—stuff that doesn’t always survive the ravages of time.

When I found my first 1st generation Savinelli Punto Oro circa 1958 with its inner tube still present I was incredibly happy. The second one was missing its tube and I will probably have to fashion a replacement—unfortunately, the whole pipe won’t be 100% original, but it will at least approximate something closer to its original issue state. As an archivist of sorts, it pains me when I see people discard these kinds of things.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ThermionicScott

Professor Moriarty

Can't Leave
Apr 13, 2023
466
1,385
United States
My recently purchased new Dunhill came with an aluminum tube. It enters the bowl, with its airhole opening centered at the bottom of the bowl. Among other advantages, this prevents the drilled smoke hole in the bowl from overheating and cracking at the top.
 
  • Like
Reactions: orlandofurioso

Duck

Can't Leave
Aug 28, 2021
439
2,350
Edinburgh
I have a Barber B Line Group 4 She'll Briar Lovat which I dropped and cracked a bit out of the mortice.

Now it may be a Dunhill reject, but it's still just a basket pipe. Much as I like it, it's not the sort of pipe you splash out on getting a silver band fitted. So, I tried super gluing the broken off bit back in.

The result was as expected. When I smoked it, expansion caused one side of the repair to fail. Thus I had a leaky pipe with next to no draw.

Next I ordered up some unbranded tubes from an online tobacconist in the UK. The White Spot branded ones are expensive.

I had to widen the first centimetre of the bore in the mouthpiece, from 3.5mm to 4mm, and cut the tube to length. I wasted a tube learning how to cut it. Thin walled aluminium tubes are easily crushed.

Anyway fitting the tube was a success. Effectively it acts as a tenon, and the entire length of the shank became the mortice.

The pipe now smokes as well as it did before. That's how I became a tube user for that one pipe.