Does no one else use rum or whiskey to clean their pipes?
No reason not to except that “dark” spirits leave a residue after evaporation.Does no one else use rum or whiskey to clean their pipes?
Does no one else use rum or whiskey to clean their pipes?
I like my obsessions.Some folks have almost an obsession with alcohol, and I am not talking about alcoholics!
Some folks have almost an obsession with alcohol, and I am not talking about alcoholics!
I enjoy your thoughtful, informed, reasoned, and articulate posts. If I may ask, what is your profession?This is one of my favorite topics to cover when it comes to this hobby. It should be one of the few times pure, objective reasoning can come into play. We're talking about chemicals and their reaction to organic material (namely, carbon deposits left behind by tobacco and briar wood). This should be something that can be answered fairly empirically. Not by me, mind you; I'm a liberal arts major, so I'm well out of my depth.
fwiw, I'm a 90% alcohol and cotton guy for the chamber, a good shank brush for the shank, and Decatur stem cleaner for the stems. I find this three piece combo does the job. But is it optimal? Is it truly good for pipes? I don't know!
I don't say this disrespectfully, but some people's reasoning will make me raise my eyebrows. The whole "if I can't drink it, I won't use it to clean my pipes" thing, for example, baffles me. I can drink a shamrock shake, but I wouldn't use it to clean my Petersons. And there aren't many cleaning chemicals that I can think of that I would drink regardless what they are used to clean. I mean, I can't be the only one who finds it funny that some people will act as if you're a fool for cleaning pipes with anything that isn't some gas station booze that a hobo wouldn't even use to get good and pissered with.
Dumb jokes aside, does anyone have a link to something empirical on this? I'd love to educate myself on the matter further, but most articles on the matter seem to be the writer proselytizing their preferred method more than anything else.
I'm a case manager at a jail. The short version is I help inmates with reentry, and build relationships with community resource providers to help make reentry possible. I appreciate the kind words! If I am articulate, it's probably because I just read a lot. Working at a jail does demand good communication skills, but of a different sort used here.I enjoy your thoughtful, informed, reasoned, and articulate posts. If I may ask, what is your profession?
“Empirical”…….You haven’t been here very long. This forum is the land of the contrarians!This is one of my favorite topics to cover when it comes to this hobby. It should be one of the few times pure, objective reasoning can come into play. We're talking about chemicals and their reaction to organic material (namely, carbon deposits left behind by tobacco and briar wood). This should be something that can be answered fairly empirically. Not by me, mind you; I'm a liberal arts major, so I'm well out of my depth.
fwiw, I'm a 90% alcohol and cotton guy for the chamber, a good shank brush for the shank, and Decatur stem cleaner for the stems. I find this three piece combo does the job. But is it optimal? Is it truly good for pipes? I don't know!
I don't say this disrespectfully, but some people's reasoning will make me raise my eyebrows. The whole "if I can't drink it, I won't use it to clean my pipes" thing, for example, baffles me. I can drink a shamrock shake, but I wouldn't use it to clean my Petersons. And there aren't many cleaning chemicals that I can think of that I would drink regardless what they are used to clean. I mean, I can't be the only one who finds it funny that some people will act as if you're a fool for cleaning pipes with anything that isn't some gas station booze that a hobo wouldn't even use to get good and pissered with.
Dumb jokes aside, does anyone have a link to something empirical on this? I'd love to educate myself on the matter further, but most articles on the matter seem to be the writer proselytizing their preferred method more than anything else.
I like this idea. I’m too paranoid I’d ruin the finish on a pipe to use alcohol. Water should be safe as long as the pipe dries well, right?Why waste that stuff when 95% of cleaning can be done by hot water.
Water is the safest. If the pipe has been smoked to the bottom- ie, it's dry in the heel- you can hot water flush, paper towel dry, then load up and enjoy another bowl right away.I like this idea. I’m too paranoid I’d ruin the finish on a pipe to use alcohol. Water should be safe as long as the pipe dries well, right?
Care with older estates with vulcanite stems.I like this idea. I’m too paranoid I’d ruin the finish on a pipe to use alcohol. Water should be safe as long as the pipe dries well, right?
My main reason for not using water.Hot water can bring oxidation to the surface