So 12mg would be right in the range of what I should be using right?
I mean I could lower it and see if that's the problem anyways.
yes 12mg for around 10 watts sounds pretty common.
So 12mg would be right in the range of what I should be using right?
I mean I could lower it and see if that's the problem anyways.
They use PG as a carrier in Albuterol inhalers... So, no, I would say it isn't corrosive to lung tissue.
Albuterol for asthma and PG!? | E-Cigarette Forum
"Albuterol Sulfate Syrup for oral administration contains 2 mg of albuterol as 2.4 mg of albuterol sulfate in each teaspoonful (5 mL). Albuterol Sulfate Syrup also contains the inactive ingredients citric acid, FD&C Yellow #6, flavor enhancer, hypromellose, propylene glycol, purified water, sodium benzoate, sodium citrate, strawberry flavor. Sodium hydroxide may be added to adjust pH."
Source: ALBUTEROL SULFATE SYRUPFORM NO. 0825
Please stop with the inhaler comparison.
Unless people are sucking back 5ml per day, every day of their asthma inhaler, you cannot compare the two.
Everything has a TLV and LD50/LC50.
The carrier for albuterol is HFA-134a, whatever the heck that is. But that doesn't change the fact that PG was safely used as the carrier in nebulizers for MANY years.Pg is no longer used in nebulizers.The carrier is mostly saline water.
That lung trnsplant study by the manufacturer didn't study effect of PG on lung tissue.The manufacturer is concerned only with rejection aspect.
The carrier for albuterol is HFA-134a, whatever the heck that is. But that doesn't change the fact that PG was safely used as the carrier in nebulizers for MANY years.