There are two grades of Missouri Meerschaum pipes.
I paid about $6 for the Legend with a bent yellow plastic stem and about $12 for the larger stained Country Gentleman.
The most obvious difference is size, the more expensive line uses larger cobs.
The cheaper pipes use cheaper plastic amber stems, the better line uses an acrylic black stem, and in the case of the top of the line Freehand, an even better lucite type with a tenon that does NOT accept filters.
The base models have a cob bottom. The top line uses a wooden dowel glued in the bottom. This extends the life of the pipe and helps prevent burn out at the bottom.
The cheaper pipes have a red and white paper sticker and the best have a Mylar yellow sticker on the bottom.
All pipes are made on the same line using the same locally raised hybrid cob supply that’s been aged for at least two years in the attic of the ancient 150 year old factory. Bigger cobs get made into bigger pipes. The very biggest cobs are given to one workman who makes all the Freehands at one station, mostly by hand.
After being shaped into pipes by century or more older machines, the cobs are plastered and polished. This strengthens the pipe and helps from chunks of cob falling off.
Life is short. Go first class and buy the better ones. You’d just blow the money anyway, you know?.
More top grade pipes.
The filter stems interchange between top and lower grade pipes.