I have several Petes that smoke all right. Not fabulous, but certainly acceptable. I keep two Pete bent apples in my car (and an Hungarian or two) as those are my preferred shapes while driving.
That statement rules out quality of the briar at its first cutting, curing, aging, drying and workmanship throughout. I can't buy that!Any pipe you find that smokes poorly can be re-engineered to smoke perfectly. It's entirely a matter of aerodynamics.
I think that's a good point.Just showing that wood has moisture in it at all times, and that heat it up drives it out. Make of it what you will.
I'm an entomology enthusiast, so of course I love the stuff!And anyone that thinks that a little shellac coat prevents the pipe from smoking well would probably be surprised to learn just have many highly praised pipes actually have shellac.