I want to know what it is. I've been asking the company since August.
OK. The user whose post I linked had floaters in his juice after 4 refills.
Your guess. Right.
Not any more. That was their initial explanation. Here's the later version. From the OP:
Aspire Support: View topic - Aspire official statement on Atlantis coils material
The ceramic paper that has been in question here is fully incased in organic cotton, and has a screen to keep the wicking material in its place.
If this material doesn't disintegrate in normal use, why do they need to add a cotton wrap and a screen to "keep the wicking material in place"?????
Right.
It's not easy to take a look at an enclosed coil without ripping the coil head apart.
It's not about you or me--it's about what a user may do. Yes, hers is an extreme case, but it is a real world case, nonetheless.
I know you think I'm thinking about it the wrong way. We'll just have to leave it at that!
I definitely missed that explanation of the screen, so thanks for pointing that out. But my "guess" about the black gunk isn't a guess at all. A ceramic cloth (certain fiberglass cloths, too), when burned, will be a dry white in color. Anything other than that would be either the cotton wrap or burnt juice. And, for the record, I'll never call you or anyone who thinks differently about this as wrong. Nobody here is wrong until we have all of the facts. I just meant that I feel that you are thinking about the way that cotton burns (being a warning inicator) in the wrong way.
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