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Pipe tool
Gadget for use with a tobacco pipe
Gadget for use with a tobacco pipe

A pipe tool is a small gadget designed to aid in packing, smoking, and emptying a tobacco pipe.
There are three principal pipe tools: the tamper, the reamer, and the pick:
- The tamper is a blunt instrument, either a simple dowel or shaped like the head of a nail. The flat end is used to tamp down the tobacco while packing the pipe, and to crush the ash together during smoking or relighting. Tampers are often made with a notch or small holes to permit airflow so that tamping the tobacco does not extinguish the flame.
- The reamer or scoop is a flat instrument shaped like a dull knife blade or a flattened spoon, used to scrape ash and unburned tobacco (dottle) off the sides and bottom of a pipe.
- The pick or poker is a narrow rod or pin that can be used to clear the shank of debris or aerate tightly packed tobacco. Because it is sharp, it may scratch the bowl of a pipe and so should not be used for scraping.
These three tools can be combined in different ways. Most common is the three-in-one Czech tool, which consists of a tamper, reamer and pick joined together. A pipe knife is another three-in-one tool: the reamer and pick fold into the casing in the same fashion as a pocketknife, while the blunt end is used as a tamper. A pipe nail is a nail-shaped tool with a tamper at one end and a reamer at the other. Tampers and reamers are also made as separate tools.
Gallery
File:Pipe tool.jpg|Czech tool showing from left to right a pick, reamer, and tamper File:Pipe nail.jpg|Aluminum pipe nail File:Post Medieval-Modern pipe tamper, hand clenching scroll (FindID 183926).jpg|Early modern pipe tamper in the form of an arm File:Post medieval pipe tamper (FindID 33962).jpg|Early twentieth-century pipe tamper depicting a soldier in uniform smoking
References
References
- Charles-Philippe. (2020). "How To Properly Pack A Tobacco Pipe: Best Pipe Tools & Loading Techniques". Bespoke Unit, LLC.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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