Sasquatch wrote:
Good briar goes a LONG way. A crappy piece of briar won't save a well engineered pipe, but an extraordinary piece of briar will save a less than ideally built pipe in some instances (luckily I know the instances and could index them here but am out of space).
This leads me to a new question, how do I detect, obtain or otherwise make sure I am working with a good chunk of briar? I am still in the briar mangler catagory, much lower than apprentice really, so I probably unworthy of a top grade piece, but I would like to be able to determine the qualities that I need to be looking for. Apart from pretty grain, solid structure and minimal pitting, how do I determine that a particular chunk will be ideal?
When I started to get a bit more serious about the pipemaking, I decided that my first goal was to be able to reproduce identical internal structure. I am also practicing other skills as I finish the pipe, but my number one priority is making sure that I can produce the internal form that I plan from the outset. I have been using mesquite, since I have quite a bit, it is very pretty, and it makes a decent enough smoking pipe.
I have made several pipes out of mesquite now, and I must say that even with nearly identical internal architecture, different mesquite, smokes differently. The only thing that I can imagine would make such a difference is heat conduction. The air passages are burnished, so texture and grain
should be of little importance. Odd how such small things can matter so much.
Bob