There’s a school of thought that briar quality is most important to smoking quality, and as long as I can remember I’ve been of that school. It’s briar, not the boring of the briar.
Another school teaches the importance of construction. Subtle differences in chamber size, draft hole length and size, make the difference. It’s boring and not the briar that produce great smokers.
Today I got in a low use old Edward’s and cleaned it up while my wife fixed lunch.

And I filled it with Gettysburg and it was a delicious, sweet smoking pipe.
But a friend here suggested I use a lighter to raise and eliminate the tiny little chew marks on the stem, and when I did that (successfully—wow—that’s magic) and started to use steel wool and beeswax to get the stem black again, I noticed it was difficult to run a pipe cleaner through the stem.
I could, but there was lots of drama and effort.
So I took my trusty drill I have a bit on to open up the draft holes in the shank and used it to enlarge the stem from the tenon back as far as I could.
It made a lot of rubber smoke but I didn’t break nothin’.
Wow.
This pipe is now a dynamite smoker. It was good before, now it’s outrageously good.
From now on I’ll believe in good briar that’s well bored.
Another school teaches the importance of construction. Subtle differences in chamber size, draft hole length and size, make the difference. It’s boring and not the briar that produce great smokers.
Today I got in a low use old Edward’s and cleaned it up while my wife fixed lunch.

And I filled it with Gettysburg and it was a delicious, sweet smoking pipe.
But a friend here suggested I use a lighter to raise and eliminate the tiny little chew marks on the stem, and when I did that (successfully—wow—that’s magic) and started to use steel wool and beeswax to get the stem black again, I noticed it was difficult to run a pipe cleaner through the stem.
I could, but there was lots of drama and effort.
So I took my trusty drill I have a bit on to open up the draft holes in the shank and used it to enlarge the stem from the tenon back as far as I could.
It made a lot of rubber smoke but I didn’t break nothin’.
Wow.
This pipe is now a dynamite smoker. It was good before, now it’s outrageously good.
From now on I’ll believe in good briar that’s well bored.















