The Short of it:
On an ebay pipe, I had a hard to pull out tenon that ended up snapping.
I superglued it, but there seems to be an air leak that is impeding proper lighting.
How can I fix?
Details:
I have a pipe tenon that snapped as I was trying to remove the stem for cleaning.
I had just gotten the pipe in from ebay.
It's a billiard type with a really thin stem.
The fit was so tight, but I was being careful, at least trying to be. I was able to rotate it a little and move it about 0.5mm out.
That was so difficult that I reconsidered trying to get it out. I just wanted to rotate it back to centered (or 12 o'clock, whatever the term is), and realize that I would just clean the pipe with the stem in place always.
But in trying to center it, it snapped... in the usual place, leaving most of the tennon in the shank.
It was such a tight fit, that I knew I'd never get it out.
The pipe is also not very expensive, so sending it off for repair would cost more than the pipe.
So I decided to superglue it.
I am pretty happy with how it looks, but when smoking it, I discovered that enough air is getting in around the glued joint, that it is causing problems lighting the pipe. Even a strong draw is not really pulling on the flame hard enough to get the heat down to the tobacco.
If I wrap my fingers around the joint, then it lights fine.
However, the hole (or what must be a crack) is not enough to cause too much of a problem when smoking. it almost resembles a Carey Magic Inch, as it lets some air in when you draw.
So I guess as I was gluing it up, I did not glue a whole circle, or maybe as I was positioning it when drying, I tilted it too much, and the leak/crack was created.
What can I do?
I have some beeswax that I thought might not be unsightly if I crammed it into the crack. The shank might be long enough not to have that area get hot enough to melt the wax.
I guess I could try to press some superglue into the crack, being ready to wipe any off that ended up on the outside of the shank or bit.
On an ebay pipe, I had a hard to pull out tenon that ended up snapping.
I superglued it, but there seems to be an air leak that is impeding proper lighting.
How can I fix?
Details:
I have a pipe tenon that snapped as I was trying to remove the stem for cleaning.
I had just gotten the pipe in from ebay.
It's a billiard type with a really thin stem.
The fit was so tight, but I was being careful, at least trying to be. I was able to rotate it a little and move it about 0.5mm out.
That was so difficult that I reconsidered trying to get it out. I just wanted to rotate it back to centered (or 12 o'clock, whatever the term is), and realize that I would just clean the pipe with the stem in place always.
But in trying to center it, it snapped... in the usual place, leaving most of the tennon in the shank.
It was such a tight fit, that I knew I'd never get it out.
The pipe is also not very expensive, so sending it off for repair would cost more than the pipe.
So I decided to superglue it.
I am pretty happy with how it looks, but when smoking it, I discovered that enough air is getting in around the glued joint, that it is causing problems lighting the pipe. Even a strong draw is not really pulling on the flame hard enough to get the heat down to the tobacco.
If I wrap my fingers around the joint, then it lights fine.
However, the hole (or what must be a crack) is not enough to cause too much of a problem when smoking. it almost resembles a Carey Magic Inch, as it lets some air in when you draw.
So I guess as I was gluing it up, I did not glue a whole circle, or maybe as I was positioning it when drying, I tilted it too much, and the leak/crack was created.
What can I do?
I have some beeswax that I thought might not be unsightly if I crammed it into the crack. The shank might be long enough not to have that area get hot enough to melt the wax.
I guess I could try to press some superglue into the crack, being ready to wipe any off that ended up on the outside of the shank or bit.
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