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Pipes & Tobacco
DIY
Black lining in a new pipe........
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<blockquote data-quote="Wet Dottle" data-source="post: 160895" data-attributes="member: 192"><p>Using a coating agent when breaking a pipe has saved me from damaging bowls. In the past I found that much care and slow puffing is needed for breaking in an uncoated bowl, or else the risk of some burning is just too high. I'm not very patient and want to smoke as I please from the beginning, therefore I always coat the bowl. Coating also accelerates substantially cake build-up. But I prefer to buy uncoated pipes and use my own recipe, which I tuned up from similar recipes used by some pipe makers.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Wet Dottle, post: 160895, member: 192"] Using a coating agent when breaking a pipe has saved me from damaging bowls. In the past I found that much care and slow puffing is needed for breaking in an uncoated bowl, or else the risk of some burning is just too high. I'm not very patient and want to smoke as I please from the beginning, therefore I always coat the bowl. Coating also accelerates substantially cake build-up. But I prefer to buy uncoated pipes and use my own recipe, which I tuned up from similar recipes used by some pipe makers. [/QUOTE]
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Black lining in a new pipe........
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