Water Bongs
Why would you want to smoke a bong?
According to some, despite its status as a cultural symbol in the cannabis community, the bong remains a mystery to many people, no matter how long it has been around.
Like the internal combustion engine, few people understand how Water bongs work, even yet millions of people do it every day, to get them through their days.
Bong: What Is It?
After the marijuana has been dried and cured, a bong is used to smoke it. Like the one-hitter, it has an increased capacity and one or two built-in specialised filters.
All of this information will be explained in more detail in the following section, "How Does a Bong Work." For the time being, it's sufficient to know that, along with the joint and the brownie, a bong is a frequent way to consume cannabis.
Water pipes, Water bongs, bings and billies are some of the more common names for bongs. They are normally made of glass and come in a variety of shapes and sizes.
The more creative among us have gone so far as to create their own bongs from non-traditional materials such as wood, plastic, porcelain, fruit (yes, fruit), and even gold with diamonds placed in it.
What is the Bong's purpose?
Now that you're familiar with the modern bong's history and the components that make it up, we'll move on to the subject of "How does Water bongs work?"
When utilising a bong, the bowl-end of the device serves as the beginning point for the smoking process. In contrast, the bong's mouthpiece, which is placed at the other end, is effectively where the device's mechanism starts.
An air-tight seal is produced when you gently breath through the mouthpiece until you reach the water's surface. Allows for a better inhalation of air (like trying to suck the water through a straw).
The bong's genuine magic starts to manifest itself at this point in the manufacturing process.
Water's specific gravity is higher than that of smoke (which is why smoke will rise and water will stay put). As a result, while sucking the contents of the base via the tube, smoke will rise (also known as "percolate") through the water and enter the tube.