CHACOM creator and distributor of fine pipes

The stem was very damaged with a bite through on the top side and much chewing around the edges of the stem. The bowl is very dirty with little room in the bowl – thick cake and lots of overflow on to the back side of the rim.I reamed the bowl with reamers. I cleaned the mortise, and the airway in the shank and stem with pipe cleaners and alcohol. You can see what the bowl looks like now in the next two photos.

Most notably was Pierre Morel who had initially worked on the Chacom Gran Cru, Naja and Fluer de Bruyere handmade ranges and eventually became the companies head pipe maker. Still to this day Chacom are known for their traditional manufacturing techniques, with a very contempory look and feel them. After the “Great War” the St Claude factory is renamed is “CHAPUIS COMOY & Cie”.

Step 1When a pipe has a heavy cake inside the bowl, I like to put it through a salt and alcohol treatment. This method does a great job at cleaning the pipe, softening the hardened cake making it easier to remove from the bowl. It also, freshens up the bowl and gets ride of any ghosting left from prior tobaccos smoked. In the blog itself he breaks his process down into two parts – cleaning the stem and cleaning the bowl.

From the pictures below, it is amply evident that I did not achieve the exact consistency I desired, but no issues, it still worked!!! Since the beginning of my journey into the beautiful and challenging world of pipe refurnishing, I am being faced with problem relating to glue. Maybe the hot temperate climate prevalent here is causing issues or the quality of glue itself is an issue. However notwithstanding the issues of glue, I was able to prepare a mixture of CA superglue and activated charcoal and applied it to the surface.

Surely, if you have been smoking a pipe for a while you have no doubt reached the point where you want to try something that’s off the beaten path. So in this guide, the team at Paykoc Pipes will set our sights far afield in order to track down some of the rarest pipe tobaccos that are commercially available, somewhere. Antoine has made it his mission to significantly revise the design of the pipes and increase the quality without neglecting the roots and core business. So Chacom is still in demand today as a supplier for pre-turned bowls, mouthpieces and the execution captain black tobacco of complete production processes. Several tens of thousands of pre-turned bowls from old brands that have been taken over are still stored in the factory. Every now and then a series with these bowls comes on the market and enjoys great popularity.

I shall be working on the stems of both these pipes simultaneously while the stummel will be worked on separately. The write up on both, though separate, is being uploaded at captain black tobacco the same time so as to maintain continuity. The Chacom brand originated in Saint-Claude, France, in 1928. The name was taken from the family names ‘Comoy’ and ‘Chapuis’, representing the men who had created the brand and were in fact creating pipes even before the discovery of briarwood. Antoine GRENARD, managing director, is the 6th generation in charge of this family-owned company.

Puff your pipe slowly and steadily to get a soft smoke without heating the pipe. The tobacco must be packed regularly to maintain a moderate puff and prevent the pipe from gurgling. An average pipe usually lasts 40 minutes (the world record in slow smoking is more than three hours!). If your pipe gets blocked, let it cool down and take another one. Graduated from a Design University, he creates several new models ( Sphère, Vulcano, Monza… ) all modern shapes with keeping the renowned know-how and quality of the CHACOM pipes. Christie Handmade Pipes are hand crafted right in Waynesboro, Pennsylvania with world class craftsmanship by Pipemaker Eric E. Christie.

I almost passed it by had it not been for the vendor who was cleaning his case, he was kind enough to say ‘hi’ and ask what I was looking for. He just so happened to have a few pipes hiding in a glass case in the back of his store. The carving looked good but was also too amateurish to me to have come from Chacom who are known as peterson pipes innovators and fine craftsman of great pipes but I thought maybe there would be something. The brand Chacom Chacom, créateur et distributeur de pipes turned up (1934) after fusion of Chapuis-Comoy with La Bruyère.