Sanding the Inside of an Estate Pipe?

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uzzi101

Starting to Get Obsessed
Dec 18, 2019
118
391
California, USA
I’ve recently purchased a Castello estate pipe that’s been refurbished with the black coating on the inside of the bowl.

The pipe beautiful, but has the taste of a bitter charcoal, and I’m thinking it’s the coating on the bowl which made it look nice, but taste bad.


I’m considering sanding out the inside of the bowl to bring the pipe to its natural briar, as a new Castello would be.

Has anyone sanded out the inside of a bowl?
What did you use to ensure smooth, consistent finish?

I’m worried about ruining this beautiful pipe with the sanding so not sure what to do.

Maybe the bitter charcoal taste will subside after a few more bowls?

I’m on bowl number 3 and not much improvement.

I appreciate and advice or insight on this one.

Thank you kindly
 

OzPiper

Lifer
Nov 30, 2020
6,760
36,434
72
Sydney, Australia
I sanded out (well, most of it) the coating of a new Tom Eltang recently.
The 1st smoke out of it (pre-sanding) was putrid :poop:

The second smoke was a lot better, with an intermittent off taste.
Hopefully it will keep improving with subsequent smokes.

I really did not want to dedicate that pipe to Latakia blends. ?
 

verporchting

Lifer
Dec 30, 2018
3,003
9,279
Alternatively smoke a few bowls of Five Brothers burley shag out of it. That might just scare the remaining coating out of the pipe and you’ll have a decent cake layer already forming.
 
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reloader

Lifer
Dec 5, 2021
1,981
23,988
Southern, NM
I've used emery cloth to lightly sand out some bowl coatings on new pipes. I've also used a damp paper towel and both have worked well to remove most of the coating. I haven't gone all the way to briar with either method. That seemed to get rid of the taste.
 

jpmcwjr

Lifer
May 12, 2015
26,281
30,316
Carmel Valley, CA
Yep, just lightly sanded out the bowls of three estate pipes like this on Sunday. Works like a charm.
Estate pipes are unlikely to have any trace of bowl coating, so reaming and sanding are pretty much the main options for trimming that down.

Most bowl coatings will yield to water; if no joy, then alcohol, and last resort, sanding.
 
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kschatey

Lifer
Oct 16, 2019
1,118
2,283
Ohio
Estate pipes are unlikely to have any trace of bowl coating, so reaming and sanding are pretty much the main options for trimming that down.

Most bowl coatings will yield to water; if no joy, then alcohol, and last resort, sanding.
Yeah, I don't have a reamer. Actually, a magic eraser and some alcohol worked great for me. Not actually sanding.
 

Bobby Bailey

Starting to Get Obsessed
Aug 8, 2021
203
349
69
Upper Southwest Arkansas, USA
Wipe it out with a paper towel wet with water or one wet with Bourbon, or just sand it out. A pipe isn't as magical as some think, it's just a piece of wood intended to build a fire within.

If you think sanding will remove too much wood, wrap a piece of 220 grit around your finger and sand lengthwise on a popsicle stick. Time how long it takes to sand the popsicle stick into.
 
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anotherbob

Lifer
Mar 30, 2019
16,670
31,248
46
In the semi-rural NorthEastern USA
refurbished you say. I can't help but wonder if the coating is just what they do or if there is something that isn't right underneath the coating. I'd personally just smoke through it. But I never get too much nasty from coatings anyways so....
 
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