Vol. VI · No. VII · July, MMXXVISearchSubscribeThe Humidor Notebook →
The Cigar Basics · No. CIV

Cigar Ring Gauge Explained

Ring gauge affects flavor, draw, burn time, and intensity.

By the EditorsJul 16, 20261 Min Read
v of v — Essential
Cigar Ring Gauge Explained
Cigar BasicsEditors’ Notes

Ring gauge determines the cigar diameter in 64ths of an inch. A 50-ring cigar is 50/64 of an inch across. Understanding this number helps you predict how a cigar will smoke.

How Ring Gauge Affects Flavor

Larger ring gauge means more filler tobacco inside, allowing the blender to use more leaf varieties for complexity. Smaller ring gauges (38-42) contain less filler, so wrapper and binder dominate the flavor. The same blend in a lancero (38 ring) tastes different from a gordo (60 ring). The ratio changes everything.

Burn Temperature and Draw

Thinner cigars burn hotter, amplifying bitterness and spice. Larger ring gauge cigars burn cooler. The mass absorbs heat more efficiently. Thinner cigars have a tighter draw; larger rings offer an open, effortless pull.

Burn Time

A 5x50 robusto lasts 45 to 60 minutes. A 7x48 Churchill takes 90 minutes or more. Choose ring gauge partly based on available time.

Common Ranges

38-42: thin, classic formats emphasizing wrapper. 44-52: the most popular sizes (corona, robusto, toro), balanced formats. Above 52: gordo territory, burning cool and showcasing complex filler blends.

Choosing the Right Ring Gauge

Time budget, flavor preference, and occasion all factor in. Try the same blend in multiple sizes to discover how format changes the experience.

The Verdict
V
of V

A cigar that rewards the hour you spend with it.

Not the flashiest on the shelf, not the cheapest, but one of the few that will taste the same good way in five years as it did tonight. Stock accordingly.

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