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Pipes & Tobacco
General Pipe Discussion
New pipe break in
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<blockquote data-quote="Anders And" data-source="post: 115734" data-attributes="member: 1271"><p>When breaking in a new pipe, I always fill it completely and smoke it to the very bottom. Then I stir the ashes a little so the fine dust would stick to the chamber walls. After a while, when the pipe has had enough time to cool down, I let the ashes fall out and clean the rest of the pipe, but leave the chamber as it is.</p><p></p><p>Until now, each new pipe I bought had a carbon/sodium silicate coating and I haven’t encountered any problems with this method, no matter what kind or cut of tobacco I used to break them in.</p><p></p><p>Normally, I use the blend I want to smoke in a new pipe for breaking it in. So I have my pipes for VA and those for English blends. Two of my pipes have only seen one single blend so far: my Peterson (Irish Flake) and my Jirsa (MB Navy Flake).</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Anders And, post: 115734, member: 1271"] When breaking in a new pipe, I always fill it completely and smoke it to the very bottom. Then I stir the ashes a little so the fine dust would stick to the chamber walls. After a while, when the pipe has had enough time to cool down, I let the ashes fall out and clean the rest of the pipe, but leave the chamber as it is. Until now, each new pipe I bought had a carbon/sodium silicate coating and I haven’t encountered any problems with this method, no matter what kind or cut of tobacco I used to break them in. Normally, I use the blend I want to smoke in a new pipe for breaking it in. So I have my pipes for VA and those for English blends. Two of my pipes have only seen one single blend so far: my Peterson (Irish Flake) and my Jirsa (MB Navy Flake). [/QUOTE]
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General Pipe Discussion
New pipe break in
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