If you want others to mix recipes the way you intend, you must give us proper names, or it's essentially useless to us.
That's not gonna happen. Re-read the OP's comment in post #4 again.
i blended pre-mixed standalone flavors for this one and then converted it to a drop recipe.
They just blended several "house" ready-to-vape blends together, assumed they were single flavors, and is calling these the "flavors." No way anyone would have a prayer of duplicating this recipe
.
To
@CloudMutilator: I don't mean to discourage your effort to share something, that you found enjoyable, with the rest of us. I actually appreciate you taking the time to do so. And I certainly don't want to dissuade you from developing your own personal style of DIY. There is no real right or wrong way as long as it works for you. But, it will only work if the other person, sitting behind another computer screen understands what
you are actually doing.
As Big-vape says; it is important to communicate clearly and completely. First, because it's the polite thing to do, and second, because folks are going to get quickly tired of having to ask for clarification, or ending up with completely unvapable juice because the did what you
said to do, and not what you
actually did, and then they simply begin to ignore what you have to say.
It is perfectly fine to mix in a "little of this and a little of that" way if that is what works for you. There are
lots of DIYers that do exactly that every day and are perfectly happy with their results. This is the right way for them. Just watch a
good bartender free-pour the same amount time after time after time... it is truly amazing! But most of us can't do that. We need known measurable quantities of known ingredients if we are going to have a chance at being successful. And I assume you desire us to be successful or you wouldn't be wasting your time sharing it in the first place.
The last thing I want to suggest,
if your goal is to create a recipe for sharing, is to not use "ready-to-vape" mixes as your "flavors." Using another cocktail comparison: it is much easier to communicate a recipe if I say "Use .75oz liquor A Brand1, .50oz liquor B Brand2, and 3oz. of mixer C Brand3. Shake w/ice and serve in a rocks glass." Instead of saying "take 1oz. of margarita, 1/2oz. tom collins, and 3/4oz. old fashioned, combine and top with cola." There has got to be
at least 100 ways to mix each one of those individual cocktails so that only gives you a 1 in 1,000,000 chance of ending up with the same thing I did. It is a little easier if you are doing it with a national brand like say Halo that everyone has access to; but there is no chance when you are using a local brick and mortar's "home brew" unless they, then you, share each of those individual recipes first so we are all working with the same "ingredients" to begin with.
Best wishes on your DIY journey!