Why a sound condition Lee is always a bargain. This one had the stinger stuck in the shank. My trusty little drill caught it, and I reversed the drill and it popped right out. All the lava cleaned up with steel wool. The chamber restored to brown. I used my Zippo to heat the tenon and reclocked it. It doesn’t even need any grapeseed oil.
I own maybe a half dozen Lee Bullmoose (or Bullcap, whatever bull or moose it is) pipes.
All of them were extremely high quality, made of high end briar, artistically carved, well finished, and if not in 1950 a bargain they surely are bargains today.
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A note about the gold stars.
Brass turns green with age.
I’ve seen about a hundred Lee pipes, I’ve owned, and never one with green stars.
Gold turns black with age. So do Lee stars.
Years ago, and maybe still today, just below 10 carat “fine gold” there was an alloy metal of about 9 carat gold sold as “jewel’s gold”.
I think Lee used deeply inlaid jeweler’s gold for the 7 and 5 point era pipes.
They will all shine right back to new using metal polish and elbow grease.
The later “stamped stars” were not deeply inlaid. They seem to have been a thin gold foil that probably wore off in a year or two even then, with no hope of permanent restoration.
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