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Q: Restoring a 901 atomizer in E-Cigarette Technical; Hi, How effective are the following at restoring a 901 atty to "like new" condition? 1) Blowing air through the ...
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    Ultra Member ECF Veteran wdave's Avatar
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    Default Q: Restoring a 901 atomizer

    Hi,

    How effective are the following at restoring a 901 atty to "like new" condition?

    1) Blowing air through the atty?

    2) Cleaning the heating element?

    I've read that it is helpful to have a device blow high pressure air through the atty. If so, where would I get such a device?

    I've read that one should clean the heating element with alcohol. Is this okay? Are there better ways to clean it? I tried vinegar and it seemed to make matters worse

    Thanks,
    Dave W.

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    Quote Originally Posted by wdave View Post
    Hi,

    How effective are the following at restoring a 901 atty to "like new" condition?

    1) Blowing air through the atty?

    2) Cleaning the heating element?

    I've read that it is helpful to have a device blow high pressure air through the atty. If so, where would I get such a device?

    I've read that one should clean the heating element with alcohol. Is this okay? Are there better ways to clean it? I tried vinegar and it seemed to make matters worse

    Thanks,
    Dave W.
    You can buy the compressed air (computer/electronics department) at place's like Fry's, Staples, etc.

    Advice: use toilet paper or tissues to cover the open end and the hole and blow the air thru the battery end on the atomizer. I do this about once a week or if I'm switching from one flavor to another.

    I don't know how people abuse theirs so badly that they need to rinse the atomizer in coke or alcohol. The compressed air works fine for me, so I haven't had to rinse the atomizer in anything.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Rogue X2 v2 View Post
    I don't know how people abuse theirs so badly that they need to rinse the atomizer in coke or alcohol. The compressed air works fine for me, so I haven't had to rinse the atomizer in anything.
    It's not the abuse that requires the use of alcohol or cola, it's the harden crud that builds up on the heating coil that folks are trying to dissolve.
    DSE-901 Owner & Operator
    Since March 2009

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    Ultra Member ECF Veteran wdave's Avatar
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    I tried soaking in alcohol. It took 12 hours to dry, even after blowing with compressed air. So why again is compressed air even needed?

    Dave W.

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    Just asking after u soaked it for 12 hours did that help. Does it work now. I have one that died and I would like to revive it.

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    Ultra Member ECF Veteran wdave's Avatar
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    First...I'm talking about 901 atomizers. My 510 atomizers seem to work a lot better, without cleaning.

    And I have about three days experience doing it. And only for badly clogged atty's. It does help, though I've needed to soak the "bad" ones" every night since they started clogging.

    I like the idea of checking atty resistance recommended in "Tech Issues" on a thread of the same name.

    Dave

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    Quote Originally Posted by Majestic View Post
    It's not the abuse that requires the use of alcohol or cola, it's the harden crud that builds up on the heating coil that folks are trying to dissolve.
    Alcohol doesn't dissolve the hardened deposit on the coil. Coke will, maybe, but only if it isn't too thick already. The purpose of the alcohol is to remove the thickened liquid residue that builds up in the mesh wick. It also helps if you are changing flavors, particularly if you are changing from one of the fruit flavors that seem to "linger" in the atty.

    TT33

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    Full Member ECF Veteran tokarev's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by wdave View Post
    I tried soaking in alcohol. It took 12 hours to dry, even after blowing with compressed air. So why again is compressed air even needed?

    Dave W.
    12 hours???...LOL...I've never let anything dry for 12 hours. I'm not that patient.

    When I clean an atty with alcohol (Everclear), I just blow it out good and drip on some fresh juice. After a few priming puffs the alcohol will evaporate out anyway. If I do the Coke soak, I flush out the Coke with water, then flush out the water with alcohol and proceed as above. If I had to wait 12 hours, I'd just throw the thing away and get a new one. But that's just me.

    TT33

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    Quote Originally Posted by wdave View Post
    I tried soaking in alcohol. It took 12 hours to dry, even after blowing with compressed air. So why again is compressed air even needed?

    Dave W.
    Compressed air isn't needed and can break things. I stand the cleaned and pre-primed atty with 20% glycerin open side down on top of a 40 watt light bulb for 20 minutes.

    Once dry, I prime with 2 drops of juice install the cartridge and hit it. By the 2nd or 3rd hit the juice has wicked into the atty and it's good to go.

    I only clean if the vapor decreases significantly or to eliminate bad taste. I usually just use cola, sometimes following a vodka soak. I NEVER use rubbing alcohol because it leaves a slight waxy residue.

    From my experience pre-priming makes a BIG difference and gets the atty going like new or better very quickly. Pre-priming keeps the atty from being completely bone dry which can cause the bridge to repel juice instead of wicking it (followed by burnt taste then burn out).

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    Ultra Member ECF Veteran wdave's Avatar
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    Coke allowed me to prime and vape right after the soak.

    Thanks everyone.

    Dave

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