I hope so too. Even tho the flavor is off im really liking the vapor production. Only time will tell I guess.
how long have you been designing coils? they work just fine for me and a lot of other people. when you are the exception and not the rule where do you think the problem lies? just because you have been vaping for 4 years doesn't mean you are doing it correctly- draw, juice, and power DO effect how this and anything else performs.not knowing you, but knowing how well all the aspires have worked for me and others i doubt the fault is in the aspires but lies elsewhere. IMHO..............Looks like another bad taste review. That's 4 or 5 so far, I'm keeping track. That's 25 heads in all, give or take. I think it stands to say there may have been a faulty production line.
I did not wash my heads or tank in alcohol though, and I did only directly drip before installing on the very last head (I was skeptical on how to properly do it until I saw a tutorial - didn't want flooding.)
For anyone who still has new heads and getting a funky taste - I really do recommend trying a short vodka wash or something, and dripping a couple drops of juice into the head. If there's any success to this, please let me know - so far, even with horrid tasting tests, I do really enjoy the amount of vapor with the aspire, and it doesn't seem as though the thing ever runs dry enough to completely dry burn (though funky tastes could be a drier top coil, it only takes a little bit of dry wick to change a flavor...).
Wicking wise, these things seem to do great, but I think there's more to this bad flavor mystery than just user error - the Aspire is simply an easy device and seems to wick great enough that draw technique, voltage, or even airflow doesn't seem to effect my experience for the worse or better. As it is, not many vendors carry this product - I know there's one on the east coast and one on the west. If we all call into the vendor, they may become influenced to contact the factory and see what's going on.
If we could simply figure this out, in all other aspects the Aspire would be my #1 choice in the vaping field. It seems amazing on leaking, amazing on vapor production, seems amazing at wicking, and hey, it's easy to fill. But I don't think any single person would vape the tastes I'm getting, and with the burnt rubber taste others are getting, anyone would recognize it.
For me, I never got a burnt rubber taste really, just odd flavors of fish oil, salt, and things like that completely taking over the flavor. It did burn a chocolate vape instantly though, which was an extreme dissapointment.
Additional info: In my opinion, I would say that the coils are manufactured too close to the mesh tubing inside the heads. This tubing (not the polyfill) looks as tough it's made of the same material as the wicks, but I'm not sure on that one specifically. I do know that in cartomizers and such that have this tubing, any time that I get a drier, hazier vape, that when I disassemble the cartomzier and tear the guts of it out, that this same tubing always seems to have a burnt spot on it. In my opinion, the rubber circlet on the top of the heads is also too close to the coil, and that for safety, there's no reason these heads couldn't have been made taller to avoid that proximity. This could be part of what's giving some users a burnt rubber taste. This would impact how much juice one could put in the tank, but for safety, none of us would probably care. One last thing is that the coils have a plastic-rubber type coating on the non-resistance part of the wire - I've heard reports of coils with this feature sometimes having that material positioned too far up onto the coil.
For me, I'm personally going to try the Vision Aurora next, and with it being a bottom feeder, the only worry is truly what type of atomizer you put on top - you can also use Vivi Nova heads, if I'm not mistaken about which brand.
In PB's review, I once believed that by looking at the heads being taken apart, that the Aspire heads looked really well built and had all sorts of protection features, but to me, it seems like there's just something faulty, and with putting more logical thought into it than blind faith, there really seems like a ton of stuff that could be manufactured wrongly with the heads, just by slight measurements. I've said this before, but for all Aspire users, until this issue is figured out, I'd recommend testing the lightest flavored juices you have in your stock, to see if you get any funky tastes. A tobacco or other somewhat rustic vape may hide things you'd rather not vape if you knew they were there.
Well, searching the entire forum, it seems as though 7 users (including me) now report a burnt, rubbery, or faulty taste, and about 20 or so people have tried the Aspire. With a 3:1 ratio going on, I'd say I've been doing math longer than I've been designing coils, but it would still seem my statement stands true.
And no, draw technique, the voltage range from 3.3-3.8, and the fact that users have reported good results with the same exact juices I'm using all make no difference. I suggest you do a little bit more research in the vaping field before you act like you know what you're talking about. Especially concerning draw technique, you'll hear one person say that a lot of air cools down a coil, you'll hear another one say it heats it up quicker, when in reality, a well-saturated wick is going to vape just fine regardless - that's why some people are pushing the Aspire to 4.2-4.8, and huffing and puffing on this thing in review videos, and doing just fine. I'm not claiming all the Aspires are bad, I'm saying it seems there's a bad production line - just like the 4-hole line that exists, or do you believe that's a conspiracy theory too?
Just about the only thing that can go wrong with a coil is the way it's built, ask anyone who builds them. You don't hear anyone who builds Pheonix's and such babble on about the strength of their draw, nor do you really hear them fussing about the difference between 3.7 and 3.8 on an eGo. With these guys, they build a great coil, with a great wick, devoid of any materials but that, and then they go cranking the voltage to whatever they please and start huffing on it like it's glue. It's because guess what, their coils aren't cram packed with a bunch of garbage that burns up.
And because cotton and all that mess soaks up juice like it's nothing. But, as I love to point out, Aspire heads aren't successfully rebuildable, so if Aspire wanted to use a brand of wick that doesn't work with brands like Halo and such that are name brand juices and predominantly PG, then that's not my fault either. But the Aspire seems to wick just fine with %100 VG juice, it'd taste burnt if it wasn't and it doesn't. But my %100 VG juice (which the same juice was tested on another user's Aspire) just tasted like sea salt. I don't know how that could be a user error.
Anyone else experiencing major leakage with these? It worked well for a day, juice level got low, I thought that might be causing the leak, pulled it apart, made sure everything is tight, filled it up, still leaking...
I've stopped using them after a couple of weeks now. One head tasted like burnt tires and while the other seemed OK at first it has started to wick erratically now. Sometimes I'm getting dry hits (yuk!) and the other time it starts gurgling and floods (usually when the tank's less than 50% filled). It's just not consistent enough. I can tweak my protank heads by changing the amount of wick but these heads can't be tuned at all. And I can't be bothered with having to buy separate airflow controllers. A tank should perform the same on any device and with whichever liquid you put into it.
1.a lot more than 20 people are using the aspire
Not really. 25 at most. Use the search feature.