Unholy Stem Smell

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smoothsailing

Starting to Get Obsessed
Oct 7, 2013
271
8
Perth N.Y. (Adirondack area )
I picked this pipe up a couple of months ago began the cleaning process 3 days ago. There is a sent that I am unable to remove has anyone ran across this? I have tried soaking in everclear, toothpaste with baking soda, and soft scrub with no change. The briar has no scent just the stem. Picture below

 

layinpipe

Lifer
Feb 28, 2014
1,025
8
Sounds like a job for George with a new stem!
http://pipesmagazine.com/forums/topic/new-stem-and-band

 
May 4, 2015
3,210
16
Someone recommended an ozone treatment to me once when I had a stubborn smell. Might look in to that. From what I remember, the shipping was more expensive than paying for the process itself.

 

huntertrw

Lifer
Jul 23, 2014
5,219
5,338
The Lower Forty of Hill Country
smoothsailing:
You might try a brief two-to-three-minute soak in chlorine bleach, followed by a thorough cleaning inside and out with dish-soap, pipe-cleaners, and a toothbrush, and then a thorough rinse.

 

huntertrw

Lifer
Jul 23, 2014
5,219
5,338
The Lower Forty of Hill Country
"... sodium percarbonate rather than chlorine based."
Outside of occasional roughening (which is easily corrected using micro-mesh pads) of a stem's surface, I have never had a problem using chlorine bleach on them.

 

cobguy

Lifer
Oct 18, 2013
3,742
15
I'm thinking more along the lines of health and environment.
Unlike chlorine based bleaches, sodium percarbonate is non-toxic and biodegradable.
We use hydrogen peroxide, baking soda and vinegar as the prime cleaners in our house and they

work amazingly ... cheaper than bottled cleaners and better for your health and environment.

 

xrundog

Part of the Furniture Now
Oct 23, 2014
737
1
Ames, IA
Inside the stem? Outside? If it's outside you're just smelling sulfur IMO. Use Magic Eraser with Soft Scrub to get off all of the oxidation. Get every last little bit. Once you can look at it in sunlight and see absolutely no green it should smell okay. Better at least.

 

mso489

Lifer
Feb 21, 2013
41,210
60,433
Try the non-toxic, non-destructive cleanings suggested, and if the stem still smells bad, and if you still want the pipe, go for the replacement stem. The sense of smell is a very potent prompt to the memory and imagination, so your appetite for the pipe might have been eliminated by this persistent smell, in which case, trade that briar away.

 
Mar 30, 2014
2,853
78
wv
If all else fails, try the bleach. If it has a metal stinger you'll have to cover it with Vaseline. Bleach will eat the metal. You'll also have to wet sand the stem afterwards. The bleach smell will dissipate after a few days.

 

smoothsailing

Starting to Get Obsessed
Oct 7, 2013
271
8
Perth N.Y. (Adirondack area )
The smell is inside & out. I've done two retorts, an oxyclean bath, scrub with soft scrub/magic eraser and sanded with 1000 grit no oxidation left. The beast won't die ,my wife thinks it smells like it was smoked by a one toothed man with halitosis then tossed in a urinal. (The smell is reminiscent of a restroom on a hot summers day.) I might have to try bleach but I don't want to lose the stem logo. The worst part is there's two of them. I'm hoping the other isn't the same story.

Beast #2? Time will tell.

 
Mar 30, 2014
2,853
78
wv
If the stem logo is the plastic insert instead of painted on, bleach won't hurt it. You can put a dab of Vaseline over the logo just to be safe. Coat the stinger generously and plug the draft hole with it as well.
Bleaching is soooo much easier when there is no metal involved.

 

smoothsailing

Starting to Get Obsessed
Oct 7, 2013
271
8
Perth N.Y. (Adirondack area )
Bleaching is soooo much easier when there is no metal involved.
Thanks Dave ,no metal involved I'm gonna try the bleach first thing in the morning and the logo is an inlay so I'll put a dab of Vaseline on it. I've been restoring my own pipes for a long time and never ran into this before. Im amazed the briar hasn't soaked up the same smell.

 

spartanfan

Starting to Get Obsessed
Oct 3, 2013
105
9
My thought is that the stem might have oxidized on the inside as well and while some of the chemical treatments can help clean - it probably needs mechanical cleaning like sanding, which of course is very difficult to do inside the stem, you might be able to get some polishing compound and coat a pipe cleaner with it and run it through the stem many times to see if that helps remove some of the oxidized surface but that would probably take a long to do, don't know if it would be worth all the work

 

gambit88

Can't Leave
Jan 25, 2015
341
2
I'll second Dave. Tape off or use something to cover the logo. I've done probably 30 kaywoodies and that logo is some sort of paint or filler I think. I've a few that needed the logo replaced. None so far on black and white logo so it could be tougher.

 

12pups

Lifer
Feb 9, 2014
1,063
2
Minnesota
Boy, if baking soda and Hydrogen Peroxide don't work, that would leave me clueless. I can vouch for them as scent removers, at least as far as getting skunked goes. 4:1, peroxide to soda works on the dogs and is safe for all but their eyes. (But the pipe stem doesn't have eyes). But... maybe that only works because the skunk oil is on the surface and won't penetrate if the stem is deeper affected? Not having tried it in a situation like yours, can only give testimonial about its smell-eliminating power in general.

 
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