What is a normal percentage of defective stuff in any given batch of briar chunks?
I'm thinking there are 3 main categories: Unusable due to major defect, useable but not perfect (rustication comes into play), and defectless - no pits, no cracks.
How many blanks just get tossed in the stove?
Briar percentages
- KurtHuhn
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Ah, if we knew that.....
It varies from batch to batch, from cutter to cutter, and by your personal ability to work around smaller flaws. There's no magic formula, and no consistent number of total rejects. It really is a crap shoot, mitigated only by your skill.
That said, some briar is recognized to be better than others, and you *do* end up paying more for it. Romeo Briar is recognized as some of the best, though there are some close seconds. Pipemakers emporium (pipemakers.org) carries some excellent Algerian briar, and before the cutter went exclusive with them, my reject rate was about 1 in 100. I now deal with a Spanish cutter and my reject rate on the last batch was about 5 in 100 - still very good in my opinion.
It varies from batch to batch, from cutter to cutter, and by your personal ability to work around smaller flaws. There's no magic formula, and no consistent number of total rejects. It really is a crap shoot, mitigated only by your skill.
That said, some briar is recognized to be better than others, and you *do* end up paying more for it. Romeo Briar is recognized as some of the best, though there are some close seconds. Pipemakers emporium (pipemakers.org) carries some excellent Algerian briar, and before the cutter went exclusive with them, my reject rate was about 1 in 100. I now deal with a Spanish cutter and my reject rate on the last batch was about 5 in 100 - still very good in my opinion.
I have extremly good luck with PME's wood, my avarage is about 2 unusable out of 12. But thats my average, I hand pick it. There are certain things I look out for when selecting a block.
I have better luck with their tassili. I seem to get more usable blocks when I buy more of the higher end wood.
Ryan
R Quagliata Pipes
http://www.rquagliatapipes.com/
I have better luck with their tassili. I seem to get more usable blocks when I buy more of the higher end wood.
Ryan
R Quagliata Pipes
http://www.rquagliatapipes.com/