Thanks for the reply - the shadowing on the bit - only under the rubber bit piece- is on a Lasse Skovgaard, a Dunhill and a Mike Bay - should be some pretty high quality vulcanite there.
Exactly! Buffing with 6000. 8000 then 12000 can remove but would rather not have to do that. Silicone bit protectors might work better, no sulfur.Check out what it did to my Comoy's. The bit was only on there for a week. I still use the bits as they protect the stem, I'm just super careful now with wiping and removing them.View attachment 263653
Yeah, I still need to try those and see how they compare.Exactly! Buffing with 6000. 8000 then 12000 can remove but would rather not have to do that. Silicone bit protectors might work better, no sulfur.
How true. This morning I gazed lovingly at a pipe I bought almost 60 years ago. Not a trace of oxidation I can see, and the pipe has never been sanded or in anyway treated to counter oxidation except a bit of mineral oil. The only nomenclature I can make out says "WAGNER"Something worth mentioning when "maintenance methods" are discussed:
The reason different people get different results, regardless of their method, is because vulcanite is all over the map. There are varying qualities of the stuff---MANY of them when old pipes are in play---and each formulation reacts / bahaves differently to use, storage, abuse, etc.
Put another way, saying "vulcanite" is like saying "wood". It depends on what KIND of wood when behaviors are measured. (The different characteristics aren't as extreme as wood, but you get the idea.)
The obvious gotcha being that vulcanite quality can't be seen at a glance the way different woods can. Suppliers and recipes/quality aren't (necessarily) consistent over time within the same pipe brand.
How true. This morning I gazed lovingly at a pipe I bought almost 60 years ago. Not a trace of oxidation I can see, and the pipe has never been sanded or in anyway treated to counter oxidation except a bit of mineral oil. The only nomenclature I can make out says "WAGNER"