Hi everybody,
Long time lurker. First time poster. I recently found this Kaywoodie Handmade Supergrain at a junky antique store in Tennessee. It was in ok shape so I took it for 9 bucks. It looked like it had been pretty massively over reamed and it was out of round. I sanded it back to make it even around the rim of the chamber ( taking off as little briar as possible, I debated weather to do this at all but alas..) and cleaned up the stem (still not perfect, but I wanted to get to the smoking of the pipe part). Prior to all of this I did a salt / alcohol treatment. There were some gouges in the bowl I'm guessing from the reaming, so I did do a layer of pipe mud (made from cigar ash) in the bottom of the bowl that I let sit and cure for 2 days. This also made the bottom of the bowl a bit more rounded and smoothed out so the draft hole met the bottom cleanly. All and all I thought it came out looking pretty good for my first restoration and figured it had a maybe 50 percent chance of being a good smoker. Well...it smokes TERRIBLY. There's no off taste or anything until getting closer to the bottom of the bowl which I believe is the cigar ash from the pipe mud which would eventually go away, but the overall smoking quality is just bad. It's like all the smoke goes out of the top of the bowl and hardly goes through the pipe to my mouth really. I think I tried a couple bowls of Carter Hall and one of HH Burley Flake. I'm not saying there's no smoke at all, it just doesn't compare to some of the other pipes I have and it's really not enjoyable. Any idea if this is just a break-in thing? Should I keep at it and see how it goes? Was there entirely too much briar removed and this ruined it? As far as the engineering the pipe seems solid, but I'm an armature in this department. Any ideas would be really helpful and greatly appreciated. It felt really good to bring this discarded pipe back to life (hopefully I didn't ruin it) and I was hoping to put it back to work! Thanks everyone. Pics below here. First two are before pictures, the rest are after.
Long time lurker. First time poster. I recently found this Kaywoodie Handmade Supergrain at a junky antique store in Tennessee. It was in ok shape so I took it for 9 bucks. It looked like it had been pretty massively over reamed and it was out of round. I sanded it back to make it even around the rim of the chamber ( taking off as little briar as possible, I debated weather to do this at all but alas..) and cleaned up the stem (still not perfect, but I wanted to get to the smoking of the pipe part). Prior to all of this I did a salt / alcohol treatment. There were some gouges in the bowl I'm guessing from the reaming, so I did do a layer of pipe mud (made from cigar ash) in the bottom of the bowl that I let sit and cure for 2 days. This also made the bottom of the bowl a bit more rounded and smoothed out so the draft hole met the bottom cleanly. All and all I thought it came out looking pretty good for my first restoration and figured it had a maybe 50 percent chance of being a good smoker. Well...it smokes TERRIBLY. There's no off taste or anything until getting closer to the bottom of the bowl which I believe is the cigar ash from the pipe mud which would eventually go away, but the overall smoking quality is just bad. It's like all the smoke goes out of the top of the bowl and hardly goes through the pipe to my mouth really. I think I tried a couple bowls of Carter Hall and one of HH Burley Flake. I'm not saying there's no smoke at all, it just doesn't compare to some of the other pipes I have and it's really not enjoyable. Any idea if this is just a break-in thing? Should I keep at it and see how it goes? Was there entirely too much briar removed and this ruined it? As far as the engineering the pipe seems solid, but I'm an armature in this department. Any ideas would be really helpful and greatly appreciated. It felt really good to bring this discarded pipe back to life (hopefully I didn't ruin it) and I was hoping to put it back to work! Thanks everyone. Pics below here. First two are before pictures, the rest are after.