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General Pipe Discussion
Heat & Briar
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<blockquote data-quote="Anonymous" data-source="post: 209"><p>Being a greedy sort where Embarcadero is concerned (which defeats the purpose, I know. Huffing it wrecks the taste. But the greed impulse dies hard as crabgrass), and the LatMan-ized pipes being very open and with thin cakes to boot, it is not difficult to find, after a minute of absentminded focus on something else, that the pipe has grown hot in the hand.</p><p></p><p>What's weird is, I find that by simply blowing on the hot spot, it cools dramatically and quickly. Like "hot" to "warm" in two or three seconds. </p><p></p><p>Heat conduction is very strange stuff -- as I learned doing silver soldering (working in silver). Counter-intuitive. As here. The intense heat is a purely <u>surface</u> affair.</p><p></p><p>Go figure :face:</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Anonymous, post: 209"] Being a greedy sort where Embarcadero is concerned (which defeats the purpose, I know. Huffing it wrecks the taste. But the greed impulse dies hard as crabgrass), and the LatMan-ized pipes being very open and with thin cakes to boot, it is not difficult to find, after a minute of absentminded focus on something else, that the pipe has grown hot in the hand. What's weird is, I find that by simply blowing on the hot spot, it cools dramatically and quickly. Like "hot" to "warm" in two or three seconds. Heat conduction is very strange stuff -- as I learned doing silver soldering (working in silver). Counter-intuitive. As here. The intense heat is a purely [u]surface[/u] affair. Go figure :face: [/QUOTE]
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