I'd advise you to top them off well before they're empty as a starting point. Perhaps you're running them dry.
Also, are you actually cleaning them between each refill? If so, I'd stop that as well. Use them, top off often, and after a number of full refills consider cleaning them if you're up...
Ditto. It appears as though I kicked my early-adopter habit just in time. I had a shopping cart full of 'em 3 times this week. Perhaps I'm growing wise(r) in my old(er) age. ;-)
Hmm. I'm glad I semi-ignored the hysteria and held off before ordering these. This doesn't sound all that promising, especially since you're using them at 3.7 volts. I'd be running them at 5 volts, and I can only imagine that the negatives you're listing will be amplified tremendously in that...
Haha - "more puffs". That really helps to scratch my technical itch. Not. ;-)
Seriously though. If tons of engineering and innovative design went into creating this new carto that will revolutionize the entire (booming) cartomizer industry, wouldn't you write your copy with a bit more thought...
It's almost odd to me that the only real 'feature' that they mention is that they are 'cotton free' so as to avoid contamination. If these were developed to solve the burning filler issue, enhance taste, and make for better refills, why wouldn't they push these benefits in their description...
I'm really looking forward to more 'deep' reviews on these. Can anyone who's received them offer any more detail?
Here are a few of the things I'd like to know:
1. How many ohms do they measure?
2. How many refills / milliliters are they holding up for?
3. How do they taste compared to a...
5.4v - 5.6v with Boge 510 cartos. ;-)
Am I the only one who finds that you need to crank this high to get the right 'taste hit' from a 510 carto? I'm feeling like an oddball here. =]
This is almost saddening - people are still trying to justify the blatant disregard PS shows time and time again on the customer service front. Sure guys - the potential customer was wrong for wanting to speak to a vendor prior to ordering. My god. ;-)
Again, coming up with general practices that reduce your time spent on the phone is acceptable. It's absolutely refusing to speak with a customer when they demand it that is downright ridiculous. It's also the kind of thing that kills small businesses.
And being small is no excuse for...
I run 3 startups, all self funded and bootstrapped to the hilt. When someone wants to talk to us, we answer the phone. Even when there's no immediate sale to be made.
Sorry, this is nonsense. A small startup manufacturer that refuses to speak to a potential customer over the phone? Wretched practice in every sense.
Want to discourage phone interactions? Fine - don't publish a number if your that ill-equipped. But refusing to speak to a customer is unheard...
That's sooooooo them. I went through the same thing.
I'm surprised that you all seem shocked by this? ;-)
PS - for what it's worth, after going through hundreds of dollars and endless support issues with PS, I'd encourage you spending your money elsewhere anyway. There are plenty of shiny...
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