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Metal Pipes for Weed. Built to Last a Lifetime.

Aircraft-grade aluminum. Lifetime warranty. A cooling chamber that actually makes a difference.

Why Most Metal Pipes Disappoint — And What's Different Here

Most metal pipes for weed are cheap brass or mystery alloy pieces that run hot, taste metallic, and fall apart within a year. That's not what this is.

The Path Pipe is machined from solid aircraft-grade aluminum with a hard anodized finish — the same material and process used in aerospace and medical equipment. It won't corrode, warp, or degrade. Smoke Honest backs it with a lifetime warranty, which no glass pipe can offer, because glass breaks.

The design is what separates it from every other aluminum pipe on the market. Inside, smoke travels through a long winding cooling chamber that drops the temperature and traps tar before it reaches your mouth. The hit is noticeably smoother than anything else at this size. It's 5 inches long, weighs 3 ounces, and fits in a front pocket.

The sliding cover seals the bowl and smoke chamber completely when closed. Travel with a packed bowl, contain the smell between sessions, and never worry about ash spilling in your bag. Almost no other pipe solves that problem.

What to look for in a metal weed pipe

Material is everything. Cheap pipes use brass or low-grade alloys that can leach trace metals and leave a harsh taste. A well-made metal pipe uses food-safe aluminum or stainless steel — non-porous, heat-resistant, and neutral in flavor. Hard anodization adds a sealed surface layer that protects both the metal and your hits.

Beyond material, look for a pipe that comes apart for cleaning. Resin builds up fast in metal pipes and a design with removable sections makes the difference between a two-minute clean and a frustrating soak. The Path Pipe fully disassembles for a complete clean in under five minutes.

Common questions

Are metal pipes safe to smoke out of?
Yes, when made from the right materials. Food-safe aluminum and stainless steel are non-toxic, heat-resistant, and widely used in cookware and medical equipment. The concern is cheap pipes made from unknown alloys — those are worth avoiding. Hard anodized aluminum like the Path Pipe is one of the safest pipe materials available.

Do metal pipes affect the taste?
Cheap metal pipes can. A hard anodized aluminum pipe with a sealed interior surface delivers a clean, neutral hit — closer to glass than most people expect. The bigger factor is keeping it clean. Resin buildup affects flavor in any pipe regardless of material.

How do you clean a metal pipe?
Disassemble it, soak the pieces in isopropyl alcohol for 15–20 minutes, scrub with a pipe cleaner, rinse with warm water, and air dry. A pipe that comes apart fully — like the Path Pipe — cleans completely in a few minutes. One-piece metal pipes are significantly harder to clean and tend to stay dirty.