Rather than venting my excitement in the "new pipes" thread, I figured I'd create a new thread. Today I started cleaning my first pipe I purchased as an estate find off eBay. I've never smoked any tobacco product as an addiction (I wholly dislike cigarettes), but I enjoy a clove cigarette once in a while (ahmm, called a "clove cigar" now thanks to bypassing new flavored tobacco laws in the States). I found a great little bar that allows smoking inside (they are licensed as a bar and tobacco seller to allow indoor smoking), and it has a great draft beer list, jukebox playlist, and live blues/jazz weekly. Add an awesome bartender and all around vintage appeal, and it's quickly become my once-a-week watering hole.
This being explained, I've always enjoyed the little pipe tobacco experience I've had, and I don't much like the side effects of inhaling smoke first hand. But alas, the taste and calming effect of a pint of good ale and a clove cigarette once a week is too much for me to ignore, so I'd rather only put smoke in my mouth and secondhand in my lungs than both first and second in my lungs and mouth if I can help it.
I picked up a couple ounces of a vanilla burley blend and a Virginia blend with cleaning supplies from a local tobacconist and bought a $6 Dr. Grabow "Westbrook" brier pipe off eBay. The line was made from the 50s until 80, and judging by the dating info I've found and by the oxidization on the stem, I'm thinking it's a 60s production. The bowl is in great shape, but the stem was heavily oxidized (olive green and tan) and has considerably deep teeth gouges at the bit: hence the $6 price. I honed and sanded down the bore to clean wood and cleaned both the bowl and stem with grain alcohol, a shank brush, and pipe cleaners. The stem was just about clogged with tar, so it took a good hour or so. I don't have a buffing wheel available to me, so I experimented with some automotive plastic headlight polishing compound I had on the shelf. What would you know, with a cotton rag, elbow grease, and 15 minutes, the stem came back almost fully black and polished enough to look acceptable! I now have the stem in the final 24-hour soak in alcohol and the bowl bore and shank soaking in a salt and alcohol mixture. They'll come out tomorrow and rest until my first smoke later this week!
Depending on whether or not I enjoy the endeavor into pipe smoking, I'll be looking for a vintage Kaywoodie in excellent condition because I've read that their vintage pipes are of superior quality while they currently have low resale value.
This being explained, I've always enjoyed the little pipe tobacco experience I've had, and I don't much like the side effects of inhaling smoke first hand. But alas, the taste and calming effect of a pint of good ale and a clove cigarette once a week is too much for me to ignore, so I'd rather only put smoke in my mouth and secondhand in my lungs than both first and second in my lungs and mouth if I can help it.
I picked up a couple ounces of a vanilla burley blend and a Virginia blend with cleaning supplies from a local tobacconist and bought a $6 Dr. Grabow "Westbrook" brier pipe off eBay. The line was made from the 50s until 80, and judging by the dating info I've found and by the oxidization on the stem, I'm thinking it's a 60s production. The bowl is in great shape, but the stem was heavily oxidized (olive green and tan) and has considerably deep teeth gouges at the bit: hence the $6 price. I honed and sanded down the bore to clean wood and cleaned both the bowl and stem with grain alcohol, a shank brush, and pipe cleaners. The stem was just about clogged with tar, so it took a good hour or so. I don't have a buffing wheel available to me, so I experimented with some automotive plastic headlight polishing compound I had on the shelf. What would you know, with a cotton rag, elbow grease, and 15 minutes, the stem came back almost fully black and polished enough to look acceptable! I now have the stem in the final 24-hour soak in alcohol and the bowl bore and shank soaking in a salt and alcohol mixture. They'll come out tomorrow and rest until my first smoke later this week!
Depending on whether or not I enjoy the endeavor into pipe smoking, I'll be looking for a vintage Kaywoodie in excellent condition because I've read that their vintage pipes are of superior quality while they currently have low resale value.