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driftedshank1

Starting to Get Obsessed
Jul 3, 2018
128
346
Lagrangeville, NY
You're lucky that you found a solution to your "sour" pipe problem. Sometimes there is no explanation for why a pipe will not smoke well. Even an expensive pipe made from well aged briar, that is drilled perfectly may wind up not smoking well for you no matter what you do to improve it. You can increase the probability of getting a good smoker by acquiring a pipe that was made from dry wood and is built correctly but there are no guarantees.
 

Pypkė

Part of the Furniture Now
Aug 3, 2024
869
2,270
East of Cleveland, Ohio. USA
A thorough cleaning cures it. Ream the cake out, grain alcohol wash, etc. Two pipes got the salt/alcohol treatment. Rejuvinating the ebonite bits helped a lot too. I inherited a box of old pipes, and they were all sour and nasty to smoke from. They're all good smokers now.
 

BingBong

Lifer
Apr 26, 2024
2,754
12,451
London UK
Thorough cleaning and leaving it a few days is the only cure. For me, it always rears its head as the blend becoming distasteful and badly behaved where before it was pleasant and predictable, time to clean that pipe out.
 

ChubbyOldHiker

Might Stick Around
Jan 29, 2025
58
144
Kenner, LA
I have only a few pipes and I've noticed that if I smoke them too much and don't let them dry out adequately between smokes, they can get a sour taste. My cob is particularly prone to this. I personally think this could be bacteria or yeast growing in the tars and goop at the bottom of the bowl--there should be plenty of nutrients and moisture in there to support them. I've found a decent cleaning eliminates it, but even just using a pipe cleaner to suck up some of the moisture and smoking bowls all the way to the bottom dries them enough to keep the sour at bay.
 
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Sigmund

Lifer
Sep 17, 2023
4,383
45,644
France
If you really want to nuke a pipe use coffee with alcohol. In the chamber, in the shank. Dry it in the sun and cook that crap out. I think its also worth spending a couple bucks for bottle brushes that will fit in the shank for a deep cleaning.
 

anotherbob

Lifer
Mar 30, 2019
18,361
33,383
47
Central PA a.k.a. State College
I have only a few pipes and I've noticed that if I smoke them too much and don't let them dry out adequately between smokes, they can get a sour taste. My cob is particularly prone to this. I personally think this could be bacteria or yeast growing in the tars and goop at the bottom of the bowl--there should be plenty of nutrients and moisture in there to support them. I've found a decent cleaning eliminates it, but even just using a pipe cleaner to suck up some of the moisture and smoking bowls all the way to the bottom dries them enough to keep the sour at bay.
yes I agree. The nastiness I got wasn't just tars or left overs from smoking. It was certainly something else. Either a chemical reaction or like we both think some kind of bacteria growth.
 

Choatecav

Lifer
Dec 19, 2023
1,902
18,501
Middle Tennessee
I had one which no amount of cleaning the bowl, shank and mortise helped.
Turns out the problem was internal oxidation of the vulcanite stem.
I got it re-stemmed (acrylic) which solved the problem.
Oz, what would make only that vulcanite stem oxidize? Have you ever had others do that??
I only ask because I have not.
 

OzPiper

Lifer
Nov 30, 2020
8,099
46,492
73
Sydney, Australia
Oz, what would make only that vulcanite stem oxidize? Have you ever had others do that??
I only ask because I have not.
Vulcanite comes in a whole lot of quality grades. I have stems over 100yo which are still shiny black. And ones that oxidise despite being kept in a dark cupboard.
Unfortunately before discovering the Forums, I had a habit of displaying my pipes on a window sill.
 
Apr 24, 2020
7
2
I'll second what Sigmund posted about drying pipes in the sun after applying the cleaning treatment of your choice. I've read that Tom Eltang does this with his pipes and I've used this technique with very good results over the years.