Blog by Dave Gossett
My Army cousin stationed in Italy came to the states recently bearing gifts. He bought me 9 pipes at a swap meet in Vencenza – 5 Savinelli’s, 2 Brebbia’s, 1 Rossi, and 1 lesser known Italian briar. I’m a sucker for silver bands, long shanks, and Sav’s, so naturally this is the first one out of the batch I cleaned up.
This one had not been “smoked lightly” as the saying goes. The rim was beat up, the stummel had plenty of scratches, and the stem had a hefty chunk missing.
I started out by reaming and cleaning the airways. Then I topped the bowl and beveled it, and sanded the scratches from the exterior.
After removing the damage from the stummel, I gave it a light alcohol scrub to remove the rest of the stain.
I gave it a dark contrast stain starting with Fiebings dark brown and a hint of oxblood, then after drying for 24 hours I sanded it to lighten it up and make the grain pop. A cloth dampened with alcohol can be used around the stampings to lighten the stain a bit without compromising the nomenclature.
Next up, the stem. I removed the oxidation and scored the area around the repair site. Patched up the missing vulcanite with CA and charcoal, then filed it down and wet sanded smooth, followed by a light run on the wheel with compound.
I’ve already put a few bowls of Syrian Reserve through it since the pictures were taken. Great smoker. This one’s a keeper.








Very nice…. I really like the side by sides. You did a great job with the stem. Looks awesome.
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That is a great refurb! Looks brand new. I’m also a bit of a sucker for a long shank and a saddle stem. Working on one right now, actually!
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Well done, Dave! That is one sharp pipe! Great job on that stem repair.
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Sweet pipe and awesome restoration as always Dave .You Da Man .
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Seeing is believing. Fantastic job, Dave.
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