Blog by Troy Wilburn
I have read about some of Troy’s refurbs on Pipe Smokers Unlimited and on the Dr. Grabow Collector’s Forum so when I saw his work on this old Doc Watson and the unique stamping it had I wrote and asked him if he would be willing to post it on rebornpipes. It is a pleasure to have some of Troy’s work here. He did an amazing job on this particular old timer with the distinct purpose of trying to keep the original finish as much as possible as he worked on it. Thanks Troy for taking the time to send me this blog. I am glad you were willing to post it here. Welcome to rebornpipes as one of the contributors. It is great to have you here. You have shared not only a great restorfurb but some tricks that I will have to use in the future. We would love to read about and look at more of your work. Thank you. – Steve
Hi everyone, my name is Troy Wilburn and I live in rural Virginia near Roanoke. I have been a dedicated pipe smoker for a little over a year now and refurbishing my own pipes for about 8 months. I mostly hang out on the Dr. Grabow Collectors Forum. My collection is mostly American made pipes. My favorite shapes are pokers, billiards and Canadians. Pokers are my most favorite with nearly 40 of them last count. I have kind of a tight budget to work with on my pipe smoking, pipe purchasing and pipe refurbishing. That’s why I got into refurbishing my own pipes. I’m always trying to find a bargain on pre 50s pipes as they are my favorite. Linkmans and Yello Boles are my most common pre 50s pipes with three Marxman’s thrown in. I do have a hard to find Marxman poker that is one of the prides of my pipe collection and is 100 % original finish.
I have browsed Reborn pipes for information and refurbishing info for a while.
This is my latest one and the pipe that got me here. It’s a Doc Watson pipe shape #51. I know from researching this pipe that Steve had restored a couple so I thought he might know some info on the odd stamping’s mine has. He invited me here to post my work on this pipe.
I got this one and an early Yello Bole apple from a woman who got them at the same estate sale. They both came from the same owner. The Doc Watson’s were made by KBB and though I have seen a few, mine has odd stamping of a P in a shield and mine has the name SR applied. The others I’ve seen are stamped just plain Doc Watson and with the KKB in a cloverleaf.
I know this is a KBB as it has the same shape number as KBB, YB and KW charts. The stem has the same logo as the KBBs. KBB stamped Watson’s are all marked Italian Bruyere not Algerian like this one is. I’m guessing this pipe is dated between 1936-1940 as it has the Bruyere stamp but lacks the four digit code.
After a reaming and a good cleaning I noticed that it had some discoloration spots from heat and the finish was all but gone on these spots. Also there were lots of scratches on the surface and some were deeper. So instead of stripping the whole thing I decided to try and blend in the spots with the original finish, to keep it as original as possible.
So after sanding the bowl down with some 600 grit sandpaper very lightly, being careful of the stampings and the stem with 1000 grit, I applied a matching dye that I mixed up to the spots.
The dye pretty much only stuck to the bare finish parts and the excess rubbed off after I wiped it with a rag. After three coats I applied some mineral oil. I had to file out some tooth marks on the stem and button and then wet sanded the stem.
Below is a picture of the bowl and stem back together and ready for some base wax.
After waxing the pipe late last night I saw some file marks still visible and the spots were not quite as well blended in as I would have liked. It was more visible in person that it is in the pic shown here.
So I decided to back up and punt. After some sleep, morning caffeine and some Vitamin N from some Haunted Bookshop I was ready to go at it again. I sanded the whole pipe and stem with mineral oil and 1000, 1400 and 2000 grit sandpaper. Then I applied a thin coat of red sharpie as toner and buffed off the excess with a loose pad. It left just a red tint and helped blend the dye with the original finish.
I lightly waxed the bowl to seal it in. The pipe is about 70-75 percent original finish with some slight blending and tone work. It still has some minor dings around the stampings but I didn’t want to damage them or buff them out any more than I could help. I guess you would call it a Restorfurb.
After several more coats and buffing…
Sadly the stinger is missing on this one. The Doc Watson pipes have a pretty near stinger. Here is a pic of one that I got off the web.
I’ll try to find one for it but it may be difficult as these are not that common of a pipe and they were only made for a short time.











Troy,
So you’re the person who got that pipe! I have an old Doc Watson, also written up on Steve’s blog, If you’re interested in the stinger let me know, I’ll look around and see if I can find it.
Welcome to the madness that is pipe restoration!
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LOL yep im the one . I got the Apple they was selling too it should be up sometime soon .
Im very interested in the stinger ,
Thank you Andrew for looking for it !
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My work area currently looks like a bomb went off in it, but I plan to organize it before starting more restorations this weekend. If I find it I’ll send you an email to get your address.
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Excellent
Thank you
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Troy, nice refurb on this oldie. Do you perhaps have pictures of your 40 pokers? I like the shape quite well.
Andrew
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Thank you
As far as my pokers in a group no , but i have pictures of most of them .
If you could tell me maybe your favorite ones or something i could post them .
i have almost all the Dr Grabow Poker models (85s) and a Spatra made Amphora around 20 in total,
4 Yello Bole Models 1 is a Hand Made model
2 Hard to find Medicos
1 Marxman
2 Webcos (Webers)
1 Kaywoodie Supergrain 4 digit pre 1936 ( i may post that refurb on here)
3 Jobeys
1 Wally Frank LTD Pipe Of the Month
2 custom made John Hines
1 Applewood folk art type poke carved by Ralph Gosse of Albany NY
a few other assorted of brand American made mostly.
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Oh i got 2 Stanwells too a 207 and a 245 Brown brushed Feather weight … my only 2 brand new factory pipes ive purchased . To be honest wasnt impressed the finsh started to bubble on the 207 and the FW had lifted finish out of the box and sent it back for a replacement . They smoke Meh too .ill stick to old ones.
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Welcome, Troy. Thank you for sharing this refurbish with us. The text, and pictures are awesome. Your results look like the project was worthwhile. I believe this pipe will bring you years of satisfaction. I look forward to more of your projects in the near future.
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Thank you Dave for the compliments and the warm welcome .
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Thank you
I really like pre war briar . Its just a sweeter smoke .
Ive ran a couple of bowls through it this evening and it is indeed a fine smoker . It has the wide open draw and huge air shank like the Yello Boles do , one reason the old KBB Yello Boles are becoming my favorite pipe .
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Glad to hear Troy. Not only does it look great it smokes great! A winner all the way around. I know that Andrew Selking and I both love these older KBB pipes and are sold on the way they smoke.
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Great job Troy. Looks very good and like it should smoke well for a long time to come!
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