what problems were all those people having with there mechs?
You like to read into......... reminds me of another...... never mind.
Actually yes, many do DIY - Visit the e-liquid/DIY sub-forums
They also understand more than wrapping a wire tightly around a drill bit. Little things like Resistance, Air Flow, Proper Coil Placement, correct wicking, etc.
Many Mechanical Mod owners are very well versed in how Vaping actually works.
Now, I'd almost bet every Mech owner you saw coming in for Coil builds Bought their Mechanical Mod on the Persuasion of a Sales person or the Recommendation of a trusted friend. If they cannot build a coil, they were duped on either account.
You did notice I did not say ALL mechanical owners, right?
Heck there are some Vapors I have seen that no matter what they try to use, they worry me.
Edit to add: What you may be missing from my lack of information in original post is that Mechanical mods seem to be a Natural progression for many Vapors. Often the Glitz of a fancy Vape Shop environment has long worn off and they remain unseen therefor uncounted.
I personally prefer a regulated vape for its consistent vape quality. It is also great to have the protection and to be able to Slap a build on it and tailer your power to your resistance instead of having to build to your battery. These are the reasons I recommend regulated mods to noobs.
I think mechs will continue to be popular with a niche of vapers. Some are a thing of beauty, and generally they are compact and simple.
I see the cloud chasers gravitating toward regulated mods which I think is good because they can get the big clouds with out building stupid low on a mech.
As to reading into minds... its easy when you make vague statements!
I believe that the new progression will be from e-go style starters straight to box mods, time will tell. They're less expensive, more forgiving, and easier to deal with IMHO.
As a bit of a newb to vapes but a total tech nerd... I have no interest is a straight mech mod/converted flashlight that is good for the first 30-60 minutes of vaping then either flavor continues to dimish, or its time to get a fresh batt. I can vape nearly all day @ 20-30 watts on my regulated box mod before switching batts.
Inductive reasoning is a logical fallacy. Therefore, either your premises, conclusion, or both are false. You might very well be right. However, using a flawed argument and also taking an arrogant attitude towards those who disagree does nothing to help your case.I saw more mechs come into the shop with button or 510 post issues yesterday in 4 hours than I did see with box mods. 3 damaged mechs and zero box mods! Also one of the mech mod owners walked out happily with a new Segelei 150 watt box, an Atlantis, and a Mutation X v.3...
To get back to the actual topic, I'm noticing a shift in the mech marketplace. There are a number of more affordable authentic mods, and we're also starting to see alternatives to the simple tube-and-switch design. I wouldn't be surprised if in a few months we see the pendulum swinging again.
I do not get your correlation here; mech mod owners are self reliant and don't need to hang out at a B&M? Do they also make all their own juice, etc?
My observations yesterday to not support your statement. I saw several mech mod owners come into my local B&M yesterday for new coil builds. So clearly not all mech owners are self-reliant. I mean how freaking hard is it to wrap wire tightly around a drillbit or screwdriver?
Inductive reasoning is a logical fallacy. Therefore, either your premises, conclusion, or both are false. You might very well be right. However, using a flawed argument and also taking an arrogant attitude towards those who disagree does nothing to help your case.
Let me provide an example to demonstrate why induction is so poor. I own both regulated mods and mechs. I rarely use my regulated mods. Therefore, regulated mods are going the way of the dodo.
To get back to the actual topic, I'm noticing a shift in the mech marketplace. There are a number of more affordable authentic mods, and we're also starting to see alternatives to the simple tube-and-switch design. I wouldn't be surprised if in a few months we see the pendulum swinging again.
Not hard at all, and I really don't even see the point of those coil gig thingies, exactly because MAKING a coil isn't hard at all. Mounting it might be a little more challenging, depending on the atty design. Those not capable of making their own coils, have no business with a mech, PERIOD -- it's so easy to do, if they can't manage that, how in the world are they going to manage battery safety???
I don't see them going away, no; I just ordered a 2nd one, as part of my vapocalypse prep, because I have neither the know-how nor the proper tools to "mod" a flashlight tube into a vaping device. I want to have at least a couple of devices that I know will endure, far past the endurance of electronic devices -- just in case the goobers in DC do something so drastic that vaping cannot continue as we know it.
But I do prefer my electronic devices, for all the reasons mentioned, but mainly for convenience.
Andria
From what I have seen most issues are due to PBCAV (problem between chair and vape).
As to reading into minds... its easy when you make vague statements!
I believe that the new progression will be from e-go style starters straight to box mods, time will tell. They're less expensive, more forgiving, and easier to deal with IMHO.
As a bit of a newb to vapes but a total tech nerd... I have no interest is a straight mech mod/converted flashlight that is good for the first 30-60 minutes of vaping then either flavor continues to dimish, or its time to get a fresh batt. I can vape nearly all day @ 20-30 watts on my regulated box mod before switching batts.