This has been my method for years. I always wipe my bowl after each use. This way the cake that does build is slow and hard as a rock. When it's time to get some out, it scrapes out like shards of glass.I’m going off topic a bit here…
But, I look at it like; You Pay Now Or You Pay Later…
Meaning, either way you look at it, you’re going to have to put a little effort/work into this.
But, the way I see it, if you always wipe out the chamber after smoking, and over time, if the carbon layer starts to thicken, if you put some water on a finger, and wipe it around the chamber just after you are done smoking, the carbon will be soft, and you can easily form it and wipe out any excess.
I don’t see the need for a reamer, unless someone is buying an old estate that has a thick build up on it.
Rhetorically speaking, which amount of work and effort is going to be the least, wipe after smoking, or ream down the road…
This has been my method for years. I always wipe my bowl after each use. This way the cake that does build is slow and hard as a rock. When it's time to get some out, it scrapes out like shards of glass.
I really dislike soft, thick cake, it makes your pipe stink.
A .05 second scrape around the bowl works for me.I’ve never had to scrape any out. When it starts to get thicker, right when I’m done smoking, after I wipe the chamber out with a paper towel, I put some water on a finger and wipe the inside, and the water looses it up, makes it pliable to flatten/smoothen, or rub out. As long as this is done with the water on a finger, when the chamber is really warm, the carbon should be quite soft/softer.