I actually do know someone who still has 50 or 100 boxes of Boge cartos.
Make that 2 . . .

Now all I need to get is 1 -2 of the "Original KICK" - I mistakenly PIF the last ones I had . . . Just Sayin' . . .
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I actually do know someone who still has 50 or 100 boxes of Boge cartos.

I estimate a regulated mod should last 2 years of continuous service but what if the screens can die on the shelf? So my VTC mini's and picos can take Arctic Foxfirmware which allows configuring from a computer screen. I have some tube mods with minimal protection via replacable boards. Finally a couple of mods with built in batteries. I'm confident those batteries can be replaced by an electronics repair shop if it's ever necessary. I'm avoiding mech mods for safety reasons.Thanks. One of the lovely members here mentioned that before and i got a couple (on clearance sales -- those suckers can be expensive!). As i lack both the knowledge & the courage at this point, they're still unused in their boxes. Lack of knowledge can be fixed. Desperation may overcome a lack of courage one day.
They don't have to last forever; they just have to last as long as i do.
For vapocalypse survival on a limited budget though, would you get more separate battery mods or more built-in ones? Or "six of one, half a dozen of the other" regardless?
From reddit:
- One person says that separate-battery mods are better than built-in battery mods because rechargeable batteries stop holding a charge sooner or later and it's cheaper to replace a battery than a mod. Plus, in the US, there won't be any mods to buy (legally) soon.
- Reply says that other parts of mods fail before the built-in batteries do. Firing buttons stop working, battery compartments break, leaked e-liquid kills the mod, etc. so built-in batteries will outlast the rest of the mod.
What do y'all think?
Thanks.
From reddit:
- One person says that separate-battery mods are better than built-in battery mods because rechargeable batteries stop holding a charge sooner or later and it's cheaper to replace a battery than a mod. Plus, in the US, there won't be any mods to buy (legally) soon.
- Reply says that other parts of mods fail before the built-in batteries do. Firing buttons stop working, battery compartments break, leaked e-liquid kills the mod, etc. so built-in batteries will outlast the rest of the mod.
What do y'all think?
Thanks.
I had an A7 atty short on My REO. Collapsed the spring instantly. I never noticed any heat. I was sitting there trying to figure out why the dang thing wouldn't fire. Not a clue in the world it had shorted. It wasnt until I opened the REO and saw the collapsed spring that it dawned on me what had happened. After that I absolutely trust the REO heat springs (and stocked up on extras before they went out of business).Mechs didn't frighten me either until I had a coil short out my device, luckily I had a VTC4 in it and when it got hot (instantly) I threw it and the button unstuck.
After that I starting leaning towards the regulated side of vaping.
What happen was the coil (0.6 ohm) somehow deformed and hit the deck, then the magnetic button on my Stingray stuck in a dead short situation. Let me tell you, it takes 1 second for the battery to get so hot it burned my hand through a brass mod.
I still use a mech occasionally but I'm wary.
toss it.Laugh if you must, but is there a “best practices” for the occasion something goes wrong? I keep seeing where people had mods auto fire. And I worry what to do in a scary situation.
Preferably not on to something flammable.toss it.
I estimate a regulated mod should last 2 years of continuous service but what if the screens can die on the shelf? So my VTC mini's and picos can take Arctic Foxfirmware which allows configuring from a computer screen. I have some tube mods with minimal protection via replacable boards. Finally a couple of mods with built in batteries. I'm confident those batteries can be replaced by an electronics repair shop if it's ever necessary. I'm avoiding mech mods for safety reasons.Thanks. One of the lovely members here mentioned that before and i got a couple (on clearance sales -- those suckers can be expensive!). As i lack both the knowledge & the courage at this point, they're still unused in their boxes. Lack of knowledge can be fixed. Desperation may overcome a lack of courage one day.
They don't have to last forever; they just have to last as long as i do.
For vapocalypse survival on a limited budget though, would you get more separate battery mods or more built-in ones? Or "six of one, half a dozen of the other" regardless?
The risk of harsh ecig prohibition will be similar to the EVALI. It will be hard to have conidence in the purity of nicotine unless it is legally available.
100%, it becomes hot potatotoss it.
So my VTC mini's and picos can take Arctic Foxfirmware which allows configuring from a computer screen.
I agree with Fran, toss it. If you catch it quick enough and it has a battery door that's got a tab on it, eject the batteries first. Over 10 years I've only had this happen twice, both were regulated mods. Guess the circuit board fails, just a guess though.Laugh if you must, but is there a “best practices” for the occasion something goes wrong? I keep seeing where people had mods auto fire. And I worry what to do in a scary situation.
Yep, agree with that. Sadly, there are a lot of people that assume they're invincible until proven wrong. Safety is important.It's all fun and games until 1 clueless dude blows their face off![]()
Knock on wood, I haven’t had that happen.I agree with Fran, toss it. If you catch it quick enough and it has a battery door that's got a tab on it, eject the batteries first. Over 10 years I've only had this happen twice, both were regulated mods. Guess the circuit board fails, just a guess though.