It depends on many factors.
What device?
Regulated or unregulated?
What sepecific battery?
How many batteries?
Series or parallel?
How many are in series and/or parallel (multi-circuit)?
It doesn't really look like anything special. It actually kinda looks like a atty that I've seen before... castle something?
I've also been spoiled by the Velocity as of late... :p
I've been through many devices and tested many as well... I have found that most devices with built in readers are just as accurate as an ohm reader you'd pick up from a vape shop/online store, for the most part. Most ohm readers designed for 510 threaded attys usually give an extra decimal...
I merely made a statement that said that increasing amp draw was not the most efficient and stated what the best approach was.
You are taking things out of context, just to start an argument.
The whole point was that lower amp draw is key. Maybe I should reword my statement... by maybe you...
That is not the only thing left... before jumping to batteries in series, there are other multi-battery setups that helps with amp draw (parallel). You do know how batteries in parallel handle amp draw, yes?
Point was that no one really needs high amp batteries, unless they know what they are...
I didn't say anything about settings on a variable mod.
If your device does not meet the demand... then it doesn't meet the demand.
Lower amp draw with higher wattage most certainly is possible with a higher ohm and more voltage.
Ohms Law
Ohm's law - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For 18650, there are a lot more that are 25A than 30A.
If you want higher than 30A, then go for 26650. I believe they go up to about 50A, if I'm not mistaken.
For continuous, you are right.
There are batteries that can handle higher amps in pulse/burst.
Either way, no one needs over 30A. There are more efficient ways to achieve higher wattage.
Yeah... but I also use a lot more wire in my claptons. I absolutely love fused claptons. 2 parallel 26g wire with 30g wrapped around it, and then slightly flattened on a metal block with a hammer. The sizes of the wire might be off give-or-take because I built it back in March.
I'm not saying that it cannot be done. I'm just saying that I don't like the way that thinner wire vapes. It gets hotter too quickly and I don't like it for longer puffs, especially lung hits. It's all personal preference, really.
I understand what you were saying about surface area, though...
I'm good but thanks anyways.
I vape quite happily at 0.1 Ohm daily driver with a few coil builds and they are all of thick wire. More surface area is usually always good... but so is the ability of the wire to handle more power. This is where cool specialty coils like the clapton come into...
Don't really care how it works really. I just know that a 22g at 0.4 Ohm performs better than 28g at 0.4 Ohm in my experience. For standard coils, I always get the thinner wire to heat up too quickly and it just cannot keep up with my vaping pref. Something other than surface area is at play...
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