I was looking at the mixing ratios of the doublers, and something just does not make sense.
If one starts out with a no flavor nic juice, how can you mix different ratios of doublers to nic juice to obtain different concentrations and still end up with the same intensity of flavor? Or, put another way, how can a 3:1 mixture have the same taste as 1:1 mixture?
Now, 48 mg may be commercially available in unflavored juice, but it would seem far more logical to go with as high a concentration as possible such as 100 mg. It would make even more sense to go with pure nicotine, but my understanding is that it is not available in small quantities. Yes, I know that nicotine requires extreme caution when handled.
I have 125 ml of 100 mg nic juice which at a vaping concentration of 15 mg, it would make me 833 ml of vaping juice.
Obviously, the higher the concentration of nic juice, the less the dilution one will have with the doubler.
So, why would you not want the maximum available concentration of nic juice?
If one starts out with a no flavor nic juice, how can you mix different ratios of doublers to nic juice to obtain different concentrations and still end up with the same intensity of flavor? Or, put another way, how can a 3:1 mixture have the same taste as 1:1 mixture?
Now, 48 mg may be commercially available in unflavored juice, but it would seem far more logical to go with as high a concentration as possible such as 100 mg. It would make even more sense to go with pure nicotine, but my understanding is that it is not available in small quantities. Yes, I know that nicotine requires extreme caution when handled.
I have 125 ml of 100 mg nic juice which at a vaping concentration of 15 mg, it would make me 833 ml of vaping juice.
Obviously, the higher the concentration of nic juice, the less the dilution one will have with the doubler.
So, why would you not want the maximum available concentration of nic juice?