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Phra Rod Pim Yai BE2518 Wat Mahawan, Lamphun, Luang Pu Toh Wat Pradoochimplee, Archan Churm, etc… joined the consecration in India

Archan Churm Wat Pradoochimplee BE2518 Very Good
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Monk Archan Churm
Temple Wat Pradoochimplee
B.E. Year 2518
Condition Very Good
SKU TAC-0769
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SKU: TAC-0769
Authenticated
Certified genuine
Ships 2–4 days
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Collector perspective

Phra Rod Pim Yai • Nur Phong BE2518 • Wat Mahawan, Lamphun • “Phra Rod” heritage revival • Consecrated across Thailand & India Overview — Phra Rod Pim Yai (large mold). A Lamphun-ro

Phra Rod Pim Yai • Nur Phong

BE2518 • Wat Mahawan, Lamphun • “Phra Rod” heritage revival • Consecrated across Thailand & India

Overview — Phra Rod Pim Yai (large mold). A Lamphun-rooted classic, re-presented as a modern merit batch with pilgrimage-linked consecration.

Phra Rod Pim Yai (大模帕洛佛) BE2518 • Wat Mahawan, Lamphun • Luang Pu Toh (Wat Pradoochimplee), Ajahn Chum, and other masters joined the blessing • India consecration

Collector Lens

“Phra Rod” sits in a special place in Thai collecting culture: it is not only an amulet type, but a Lamphun identity. When a later commemorative batch chooses
Pim Yai, it is making a statement — the maker wants the presence, proportions, and classic silhouette that collectors associate with old Lamphun work.
For this BE2518 issue, the storytelling focus is equally important: a merit batch anchored at Wat Mahawan (the historical discovery area), then elevated by a
pilgrimage-style consecration tied to India’s major Buddhist sites.

Collector Identity Card
Name: Phra Rod Pim Yai (พระรอดพิมพ์ใหญ่ / 大模帕洛佛)
Year: BE2518 (1975)
Temple: Wat Mahawan, Lamphun Province
Material: Nur Phong (sacred powder blend; merit-batch composition)
Consecration Theme: Thailand ceremony + India pilgrimage-linked blessing (as stated in listing)
Participating Masters (stated): Luang Pu Toh (Wat Pradoochimplee), Ajahn Chum, and others
SKU: TAC-ROD-PIMYAI-NURPHONG-BE2518-WATMAHAWAN

Price:
SGD 168

Historical Significance

The original “Phra Rod” tradition is associated with ancient Lamphun (Hariphunchai) heritage, and is widely revered as one of Thailand’s great classical amulet families.
A modern issue like this BE2518 batch is best understood as a heritage revival: it respectfully echoes an older archetype, while documenting a specific creation
story tied to temple merit-making and large-scale consecration.

What makes this batch stand out in narrative terms is the stated India consecration. In Thai amulet culture, blessing at major Buddhist pilgrimage sites is seen
as a way to “connect the object to the root-source” — not in a magical sense, but as a devotional act: bringing the amulet into the atmosphere of Buddhist origins and sacred geography.

Pim Yai: How Collectors Read the Form

  • Silhouette: Pim Yai should feel “full-bodied” — presence first, fine lines second.
  • Seat & torso balance: a stable, centered Buddha posture is key to the classic Rod feeling.
  • Powder character: look for natural pores, compact grain, and age-consistent softness rather than glossy repaint-like shine.

Sacred Materials (Nur Phong) — What the Listing Implies

The provided description frames this amulet as a sacred powder build that may incorporate temple powders, relic-adjacent ingredients, and merit-batch blends.
In collector documentation, it’s best to record the stated material story and then let the photos speak: powder density, surface pores, edge wear, and consistency across angles.
These observations are often more reliable than overly confident ingredient claims.

Consecration Path (As Stated): Thailand → India Pilgrimage Blessing

This BE2518 batch is presented as undergoing a multi-stage blessing — first anchored at Wat Mahawan in Lamphun, with senior participation noted (Luang Pu Toh, Ajahn Chum, etc.),
then brought to India for final consecration at key Buddhist sites. Devotees regard this as a rare devotional “bridge” between Thai temple craft and Buddhism’s sacred geography.

Why India Matters (Devotional Reading):
In Thai Buddhist culture, pilgrimage consecration is often interpreted as “placing the object in the Buddha-field” — meaning it is blessed within environments historically associated with
Enlightenment, first teaching, and final liberation. It’s a faith-based framing, but it explains why collectors remember batches like BE2518.

Traditional Spiritual Focus (Belief Framing)

Phra Rod amulets are traditionally associated with protection (Klaew Klaad), resilience through obstacles, and a steadying influence that helps devotees keep their mind firm.
When linked with respected masters and large ceremonies, devotees may also attribute enhanced metta and “good timing” in daily life. These are cultural traditions of faith — not guaranteed outcomes.

Photo 1 — front read for silhouette and powder texture.

Photo 2 — angle read for edge logic and surface pores.

Photo 3 — back read / surface condition reference.

Photo 4 — additional reference angle for proportion verification.

For availability and detailed photos, contact us via
WhatsApp.


Disclaimer: This write-up supports cultural and collector appreciation. Blessings and “benefits” are described as traditional faith perspectives, not guarantees.
For authentication, consult experienced specialists and compare against recognized exemplars.

Protection
Spiritual Growth

Attributes reflect Thai Buddhist devotional tradition and are not measurable claims.

Collector FAQ
Is this Phra Rod Pim Yai BE2518 Wat Mahawan, Lamphun, Luang Pu Toh Wat Pradoochimplee, Archan Churm, etc… joined the consecration in India authentic?
Yes, this amulet has been verified for authenticity and is attributed to Archan Churm. All amulets in our collection undergo careful authentication before listing. We provide detailed photos from multiple angles for your inspection.
How is this amulet shipped?
We ship via SingPost registered mail with tracking. Local Singapore delivery takes 1-3 business days. International shipping is available to most countries with delivery in 7-14 business days. Each amulet is carefully packaged to ensure safe delivery.
What is your return policy?
We offer a 7-day return policy if the amulet does not match our description. The amulet must be returned in its original condition. Please contact us via WhatsApp to initiate a return.
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This article is for education and collector appreciation. Lineage, period, and documentation notes are based on details provided in the listing and certification records. Collectors should perform independent verification and consult qualified experts when needed. Spiritual attributes described reflect Thai Buddhist devotional tradition and are not measurable claims.
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