Crack............in a cigar

Jay6
Posts: 755 ✭✭✭✭✭
So you have a really nice stick with a vertical crack near the band. Anyway to reliably fix that or is it a lost cause? I was hoping a patch job would be possible
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If you can slide the band over the crack, sometimes that works. Patrick managed to do so last night on Vherf, and it worked. It might depend on where the crack is in relation to the cherry. I suppose anything to cover the crack would work; I've used masking tape - ain't purdy, but worked - and then just put the cigar down before smoking the tape.
"I could've had a Mi Querida!" Nick Bardis1 -
Head shops carry a paper made of tobacco for rolling blunts. If I remember correctly, there's even a gummed portion that you can lick and stick.
You can cut a patch out of this stuff that should help with your problem.1 -
Thanks guys......time to channel my inner McGyver!1
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Another solution is to get Pectin from the grocery store, mix that up with some warm water and create a sticky solution. You then take a clean paint brush and lightly paint over the crack to seal it and stick it back together. I just got done the other day repairing 7 severely damaged cigars. I wouldn't hand them out but I can still smoke them at least and they will burn. Pectin is what is used to stick the cigars together when making them anyways from what I understand. Hope this helps
Brett"When walking in open territory bother no one. If someone bothers you, ask them to stop. If they do not stop, destroy them."2 -
You can buy cigar glue, and a little peice of a rolling paper. I usually end up getting frustrated and throwing it into martys yard. lolThe higher.......the fewer. ( Alexander Rozhenko)
What you can't forgive......you will become.0 -
Every time I see the title of this thread I want to respond "just say no to crack", put down the crack pipe, who would put crack in their cigar, and several other S/A comments. On a serious not though there is nothing worse than a crack in your cigar, I have fought that issue a couple of times, and sometimes it is just better to toss it, depending on where it is, and how bad.I was born a fool, and just got bigger!0
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Here are a few pics of cigars that I repaired the other day with pectin. A few were more than 50% covered in cracks and flakes etc. pectin works wonders and will hold these together so that they can at least be smoked. It's a shame since all of these are really amazing cigars!!! Hopefully the pics show the damage ok and repairs. Let me know if anyone has more questions.
"When walking in open territory bother no one. If someone bothers you, ask them to stop. If they do not stop, destroy them."0 -
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Thanks Paul appreciate the kind words!"When walking in open territory bother no one. If someone bothers you, ask them to stop. If they do not stop, destroy them."1
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TNBigfoot68 said:Every time I see the title of this thread I want to respond "just say no to crack", put down the crack pipe, who would put crack in their cigar, and several other S/A comments. On a serious not though there is nothing worse than a crack in your cigar, I have fought that issue a couple of times, and sometimes it is just better to toss it, depending on where it is, and how bad.
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I have had this happen a few times and the easiest solution is to use the clipped cap to make the repair. No glue required as it usually has some, just a bit of spit to re-moisten; should make it pliable and sticky in order to make the repair. I've done it several times. You can even smoke it right away as it will dry from the smoke by the time it gets near the band.3
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90+_Irishman said:Here are a few pics of cigars that I repaired the other day with pectin. A few were more than 50% covered in cracks and flakes etc. pectin works wonders and will hold these together so that they can at least be smoked. It's a shame since all of these are really amazing cigars!!! Hopefully the pics show the damage ok and repairs. Let me know if anyone has more questions.Logistics cannot win a war, but its absence or inadequacy can cause defeat. FM100-50
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@90+_Irishman, you do know those are cigars, and not swords, right? I've seen weapons of war require less repair. Just sayin'How do you like my profile pic Taborski? @matkn2933
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skydiverD said:@90+_Irishman, you do know those are cigars, and not swords, right? I've seen weapons of war require less repair. Just sayin'"When walking in open territory bother no one. If someone bothers you, ask them to stop. If they do not stop, destroy them."0
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@90+_Irishman,....... Brett, I read and re-read your original post and couldn't find mention of patches made from cigar wrappers. The photos showed maybe some with pectin alone and some with "tobacco patches" so I thought I'd bring it up. I save wrapper from any heavily damaged cigar or maybe even sacrifice a cheaper stick just to have repair patches. Were some of your repairs with pectin alone?0
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CAcigarguy007 said:I have had this happen a few times and the easiest solution is to use the clipped cap to make the repair. No glue required as it usually has some, just a bit of spit to re-moisten; should make it pliable and sticky in order to make the repair. I've done it several times. You can even smoke it right away as it will dry from the smoke by the time it gets near the band.Join us on Zoom vHerf (Meeting # 2619860114 Password vHerf2020 )2
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Bob_Luken said:@90+_Irishman,....... Brett, I read and re-read your original post and couldn't find mention of patches made from cigar wrappers. The photos showed maybe some with pectin alone and some with "tobacco patches" so I thought I'd bring it up. I save wrapper from any heavily damaged cigar or maybe even sacrifice a cheaper stick just to have repair patches. Were some of your repairs with pectin alone?
Brett"When walking in open territory bother no one. If someone bothers you, ask them to stop. If they do not stop, destroy them."0