Just finished smoke 57 with no internal cleaning yet.Just wait till I'm finished with building mine. I did just ream it about 5 bowls ago, but I'm hitting it hard now. I'm kinda hoping it cracks. I miss my briars lmao
Other than finishing my holiday sets from Jason, I'll likely not buy anymore. I am thinking about hitting Kenan up for three companion pieces for the owl though.I miss my briars
That sounds awesome. he does great work. I still need a claw, and out of all the pipes I smoke, I have more meers than briars. And will keep buying more meers and meer tampers .Other than finishing my holiday sets from Jason, I'll likely not buy anymore. I am thinking about hitting Kenan up for three companion pieces for the owl though.
For some reason owls remind me of Fall so I'm going to try to get a rabbit, a songbird, and a mouse.That sounds awesome. he does great work.
That is 100% categorically false.Yeah, me too. I just thought that cake cracking meerschaum sounds like bullshit. Maybe it will crack, but if cake is strong enough to crack a decently hard mineral, it should probably still have the force to crack a briar, which is very uncommon if not unheard of? But I doubt that this will benefit the meer or improve coloring, except me smoking it more.
Judging by dark areas on pipes from photos like that, I'm not 100% convinced the cake did it. Looks more like a case of prolonged hot smoking.That is 100% categorically false.
1. Meerschaum is not even remotely strong, it is very fragile and prone to cracking.
2. Cake cracking briars unheard off? Just because you’ve never heard of it does not make it unheard of. View attachment 203385View attachment 203386View attachment 203387View attachment 203388View attachment 203389View attachment 203390View attachment 203391
Cake left unmanaged will 100% wreck a pipe made of any material.
Cake is nothing more than carbon, a “dime” thick cake on a cast iron pan will crack it. So unless you think you meerschaum is harder than cast iron, I would recommend keeping your cake managed.
Cake cracks thing’s because it has different thermal properties than pretty much everything thing else, that’s why build it in our pipes, to insulate them. It contracts and expands at a different rate than briar or meerschaum. If you have enough of it, the cakes contracting and expanding at a different rate will exploit natural weaknesses in natural materials and crack them along already existing weak points.
I’m not claiming any cake will crack a meerschaum. I am telling you that unmanaged cake will 100% crack any pipe.
So, what are you suggesting? @rustiepyles needs two more pipes in the photo.A reminder: One's personal experience that something does or does not do something doesn't make for good generalizations or categorical statements.
You need five or more to be able to draw a generalization.
Also no, carbon is a phenomenal insulator. It’s literally the only thing left when you set something on fire. It’s the part that doesn’t burn. The more of it you have between fire and briar the more resistant the pipe is to burn out, and conversely more prone to cracking. Heat does not cause cracking, expansion causes cracking. Heat causes burning. Pipes damaged due to heat look completely different than one’s damaged by cracking. Pipes that burn out tend to burn out in the same spots, unless do to a defect in the wood. The tend to burn out at the heel or above the draft hole. The darkening you see on these pipes is because they were smoked for years after they cracked. It’s basically leakage.Judging by dark areas on pipes from photos like that, I'm not 100% convinced the cake did it. Looks more like a case of prolonged hot smoking.
I provided 6 and have bucket full of more.A reminder: One's personal experience that something does or does not do something doesn't make for good generalizations or categorical statements.
You need five or more to be able to draw a generalization.
You forgot the music video to emphasize your point:Sure, just smoke it and don't worry about breaking it in. Be sure to smoke it on the plains of Kansas while the wind is roaring.
Forgive me for offering a different view for the point of conversation, I'll not make that mistake again. According to posts this evening, I'm taking too many risks and living my life wrong.Also no, carbon is a phenomenal insulator. It’s literally the only thing left when you set something on fire. It’s the part that doesn’t burn. The more of it you have between fire and briar the more resistant the pipe is to burn out, and conversely more prone to cracking. Heat does not cause cracking, expansion causes cracking. Heat causes burning. Pipes damaged due to heat look completely different than one’s damaged by cracking. Pipes that burn out tend to burn out in the same spots, unless do to a defect in the wood. The tend to burn out at the heel or above the draft hole. The darkening you see on these pipes is because they were smoked for years after they cracked. It’s basically leakage.
Here’s how it works, the more carbon build up you have, the more insulation you provide.
The more insulation you provide the less expansion you get from heat.
When the carbon buildup reaches a point that it is expanding more rapidly than whatever it is insulating it will crack it.
“Cake” or carbon build up is not even remotely limited to pipe smoking, carbon builds up wherever combustion takes place. Steam engines, internal combustion engines, cutting/welding equipment, cookware, electrical contacts, ac motors, etc.
And carbon buildup cracking things happens in ALL of those places.
The automotive industry has been fighting carbon buildup for 100 years, it’ cracks heads and manifolds.
Carbon buildup causes gas heater plenums to crack.
I could go on, but I won’t. Carbon causing things to crack is not conjecture, it is 100% proven science that industry has know about for years. The “myth” that cake will crack your pipe has not persisted for 200 years because Big Reamer wants to sell us useless bobbles.
I spend most of time doing Root Cause Analysis for components of high speed automation and robotics. That means, my career is determining why mechanical parts failed. I do know a little about this subject professionally. So you can rest assured that I’m not making any of this up or conjecturing.
I provided 6 and have bucket full of more.
To be honest, I am a bit afraid of breaking my beloved meer. But I do not think that it will break, which is why I have no qualms about doing this.I personally believe that it is good to test different theory's out. This is how we learn and come to our own conclusions. That being said this is not a test i would personally preform. I tend to lean towards the knowledge that I have received from the guy's that showed me the way to smoke and care for my pipes. I can't say that the way I do it is right or wrong though. That is why i think this is a good test to preform. Thank you @TheWhale13 for being willing to test this for those like me that are afraid to break their meers.
You can always do thatAnd even if it breaks, that is just a good reason to commision a beautiful long shank smooth billiard Altinay.