+1 and they are a little easier on the learning curve...
Printable View
I have 2 DR.Grabows and they work just fine. Good for a short smoke and can be used with or without the filter if you choose. What can I say they just work. Not a fussy pipe to use. Sorry about the Peterson review for the fans out there but both mine have not so good draught hole drilling and its all but impossible to get a pipe cleaner through them if they start to gurgle. Probably the straight models dont give this issue but the bent ones are a pain to smoke.
Frog Morton on The Town in a The Guildhall London Pipe #130. Believe this was manufactured by Comoy's
Attachment 235693
Don't know the age of this pipe, guessing 50's or later.
Are they Peterson 'System' pipes ? If they are they are not designed to accept a pipe cleaner, rather they have a reservoir in the mortise to catch the moisture. I've had a few (sold long ago) that were like that. You could pull the stem in the midst of a smoke without damaging the mortise and pick up the moisture with a folded pipe cleaner, or better yet, a Q-tip.
I didn't like those either, but I have a half dozen straight Petes with the 'P-lip' cut short to be like a regular stem. I've read that they used Moroccan briar, but I don't know that for a fact.
Attachment 235709
They are neither one or the other. Problem is they use a moisture trap type system in the shank which forces them to drill diagonally instead of following the shank direction to the bowl. The exit hole winds up a little high. To make matters worse the tenon is flush fit plastic to wood and the tenon hole is pointed to follow shank. On these there is no military or pressure fit joint so removing it hot is trouble. So what happens the pipe cleaner gets caught in the moisture trap and cant get to the draught hole. Its kind of a mess.
Funny the way I smoke my 2 Peterson's especially if im out in the cold, is pipe starts to gurgle I Grab a tissue tip the pipe condensation pours out then rinse repeat. Not elegant but effective I guess.
I picked up a Whitehall from the bargain box at a local pipe show. The thing smoked very wet and i set it aside. I thought there is a good reason it was in the bargain bin! After seeing Jimmie's post above I took another look. There was no moisture trap basin in the bottom...
I grabbed my drill bits to see and there never was one. I went straight to briar. Nothing to loose so I made my own. It had no gurgling etc. this time around on a test run. It collected a fair amount of moisture.
It didn't move to the top of my list but it improved a lot and I will have to try it more often.
I come to the conclusion that from now on im getting either slightly bent bulldog or straight billiards or straight whatever. My curvy jaw hangers might as well be Hookahs hehe gurgle gurgle.
Tonight after a crap day at work its a hefty bowl of Haunted Bookshop in my Savinelli 320 ks. Jack Daniels is my smoking partner. If there was one pipe I wish I found first when starting out it would be this one. Its one heavy pipe but smokes really well and has a wide thick bowl. Perfect for pipe assassins like myself.
Here i a good homemade way to clean the mounthpiecess of oxidized ebonite
Put them in a bleach NaClO , depending on the state of oxydizing
After time , you will see that the upper layer will fall and you will have clean ebonite benieth
Rubb or polish with a wool cloth in abscense of any polir paste - works realy well .
It is a recipe for easy unprofecional cleaning of ebonite that oxydize.
Cement powder is strong abrasive and is finer than the soda - once in the millitary , they teach us how to clean and polish the barrel and the magazine of an AK 47 - Kalashnikov with dry cement powder - works like charm every time
Ive try it on some rusty razors - theresults are impresive