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10-23-2008, 10:49 AM | #1 |
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Cigar blowup
I was smoking a Nub the other day, and a little more than 1/2 of the way through it developed a sort of bubble on one side where a small section of the cigar wasn't burning. I corrected the burn, but the swelling soon increased around the entire cigar to a length of about 3/4" from the foot. Imagine dipping a cigar foot first into water and holding it there until it was swollen like a sponge in that area by a good 1/8-3/16" in diameter. Then the cigar slowly ruptured down the length starting at the foot, almost like a fault line ~1/16" deep, and the wrapper split in several places and eventually fell off. I tried everything I could think of, but the cigar finally became unsmokeable.
I had stored the cigar in a tupperdor with 65% beads for about a month before I smoked it. There are some 20 other cigars in the container, so I'm concerned that there might be a problem with my storage. Does anyone have any ideas about what caused this and what I could have done, if anything, to prevent the final result of having to toss the cigar before its time? |
10-23-2008, 10:58 AM | #2 |
CERTIFIED THREAD KILLER!!
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Re: Cigar blowup
First of all I have to say Nice Avatar! Hook 'em horns!!
Okay now down to business. My first question would be how accurate do you think those beads are and are they completely saturated? Do you have a hygrometer in there with the sticks? That sounds like over humidification to me so I would double check that the beads are not completely wet and that they can absorb moisture. It is possible that you got the sticks from a B&M that keeps them wet and when you put them in your container your beads got full and can't absorb any more moisture. If that is the case then just use a blow dryer on them and dry about 30-50% of the moisture out... |
10-23-2008, 02:06 PM | #3 | |
BABOTL
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Re: Cigar blowup
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I would add - try to dry box any cigars you plan to smoke in the near future! |
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10-23-2008, 03:05 PM | #5 |
Neither here, nor there
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Re: Cigar blowup
This has happened once or twice to me before. Did you hear the crunch of the wrapper as it was splitting? To me, that's once of the worse sounds I could ever hear while smoking. Snap, crackle and pop. I'm not sure if poor construction, poor handling, high humidity or combination thereof are to blame, but I would double check the conditions in your humi. If they look good, I second dry boxing for a day or so before smoking.
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10-23-2008, 04:01 PM | #7 | |
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Re: Cigar blowup
Quote:
I think I'll put some beads in an empty container with a calibrated hygro for a couple of days and see what happens. Over-humidification was the only thing I could think of, too, but the above led me to question that. Along with the fact that the first part of the cigar was fine. I usually let sticks I get on line sit for at least two weeks to settle down, but I think I got all of these at about the same time from the same source. So it's definitely possible that they were too wet to begin with. Thanks for the suggestion, I'll be sure and dry-box the next one to come out of this box. Is a couple of hours sufficient, or should it be overnight? Glad to see another Horns fan on the board...Hook 'em! |
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10-23-2008, 04:03 PM | #8 |
Chutney Lovebusciut
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First Name: Chutney
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Re: Cigar blowup
Were you smoking outside on a dry day? Sometimes the wrapper will dry out much quicker on a dry day and when the filler starts to expand, the wrapper can't take it and it will split.
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10-23-2008, 04:07 PM | #9 |
Juan of 11
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Re: Cigar blowup
Ok one more: The obese tend to have shorter lifespans and unnatural deaths? Well maybe 2: The hype exploded!
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10-23-2008, 04:25 PM | #11 |
Bunion
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Re: Cigar blowup
I find that if you smoke too fast, especially if the humidity in the air is over 50% that the smoke can bubble/burst
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10-23-2008, 05:08 PM | #12 |
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Re: Cigar blowup
Cool, humid evening, inside. Yeah, I hate the Cigar Krispies sound as the wrapper splits, too.
Bob, the sweet spot wasn't that sweet! So I guess it must have been the hype!!!! |
10-24-2008, 08:40 AM | #13 |
Still Watching My Back
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Re: Cigar blowup
I think it would take quite some time for a very large ring gauge cigar to "stabilize" from one humidity to another. If the Nub was placed in your humidor after being stored at 70% (possibly higher) and your humi was at 65%, the wrapper would start dropping in humidity right away. I think the interior of such a large ring gauge cigar would take a very long time to reach 65%. So, "tight" wrapper + high interior humidity = split wrapper.
WyoBob |
10-25-2008, 09:40 AM | #14 | |
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Re: Cigar blowup
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As to solution: I can see where Nubs and other larger rgs would take longer to stabilize, and it seems like the options are to either smoke them right away, store them in a separate humidor at 70%, or give them a long time to stabilize at 65%. What do you all think should be a reasonable period of time to let larger rg cigars bought on line to "settle" to 65%? As I said, I try to let them sit for a month, but I also usually smoke cigars with a ring gauge in the 46-50 range. If a month isn't long enough for a fatty, how would you tell how long is enough other than trial and error? What's your best guess as to how long "a very long time" would be? Or, more simply, for those of you who smoke Nubs, Maxxes and other large rg cigars, how do you store them? |
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