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Pipes & Tobacco
DIY
Peterson Killarney Makeover
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<blockquote data-quote="Briar Spirit" data-source="post: 355074" data-attributes="member: 2669"><p>Very good of you to look at the pipe for your friend and the grain is quite nice under that nasty coating, as the chamber has a noticeable start of a burn-out I would give the damaged area a pipe-mud treatment and give the pipe a couple of days for the cement to go off. If the damage isn't dealt with prior to your friend continuing to smoke his pipe it is quite likely to have a full on burn-out. As you will know it will have suffered the damage as there will have been a bit of sand or stone inside the Briar so there was a tiny hole inside the wood, this will mean there is potentially much deeper damage than the eye will detect, a coating of pipe-mud will stop any further damage. :sunny: </p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Briar Spirit, post: 355074, member: 2669"] Very good of you to look at the pipe for your friend and the grain is quite nice under that nasty coating, as the chamber has a noticeable start of a burn-out I would give the damaged area a pipe-mud treatment and give the pipe a couple of days for the cement to go off. If the damage isn't dealt with prior to your friend continuing to smoke his pipe it is quite likely to have a full on burn-out. As you will know it will have suffered the damage as there will have been a bit of sand or stone inside the Briar so there was a tiny hole inside the wood, this will mean there is potentially much deeper damage than the eye will detect, a coating of pipe-mud will stop any further damage. :sunny: [/QUOTE]
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Peterson Killarney Makeover
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