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<blockquote data-quote="Kyle Weiss" data-source="post: 296206" data-attributes="member: 1969"><p>The real crux of the issue is two camps are trying to arm wrestle each other into submission. Since carvers, factories or independents alike, are the ones making these decisions, it's nice to know the buyers have options. You know, saying this...as a buyer. :lol: It's true, like Yak said, the bigger companies are probably always gonna coat if they do so already. They have the most trouble with more pipes going out and more chances of some enthusiastic newbie having a burnout. The whole it-should-be-standard-equipment mantra, though...that's what I question. I'll probably always like the taste of a virgin chamber, I'd hate for that to be more trouble for me to achieve needing to scrape and sand--that action's for estate pipes, after all, where part of the good deal of a fixer-upper is it needs fixin' up. </p><p></p><p>8)</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Kyle Weiss, post: 296206, member: 1969"] The real crux of the issue is two camps are trying to arm wrestle each other into submission. Since carvers, factories or independents alike, are the ones making these decisions, it's nice to know the buyers have options. You know, saying this...as a buyer. :lol: It's true, like Yak said, the bigger companies are probably always gonna coat if they do so already. They have the most trouble with more pipes going out and more chances of some enthusiastic newbie having a burnout. The whole it-should-be-standard-equipment mantra, though...that's what I question. I'll probably always like the taste of a virgin chamber, I'd hate for that to be more trouble for me to achieve needing to scrape and sand--that action's for estate pipes, after all, where part of the good deal of a fixer-upper is it needs fixin' up. 8) [/QUOTE]
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