Oh, I meant to include this pic that shows the nichrome wire hooked around the little sliver in the mesh before wrapping...

so, when you wrap the wires down, dow they criss cross ?
You have to wrap very carefully to avoid criss-crossing and shorting. Speaking of shorting, I've noticed that nichrome 60 is much less likely to short than nichrome 80. In fact, you can oxidize nichrome 60 just like you can oxidize ss mesh. You can oxidize nichrome 60 and wrap it around a nail and it won't short. Not so with nichrome 80 and I have no idea about kanthal because I've never used it.
KY, that looped winding of yours is brilliant in my opinion. Makes my mind dizzy with new ideas. Thanks for sharing.
Li-PO cells are 3 - 3.2V. ????....I'm convinced it can be done in a very small package that will run on a single 3.7 lipo cell.
Li-PO cells are 3 - 3.2V. ????
Still not right.
Li-Ions, 3.7V nominal, 4.2V fully charged
Li-POs, 3V nominal (sometimes referred to as 3.2V working), 3.6V fully charged.
There are also 3V Li-Ions, but they are actually 3.7V cells with a tiny regulator built in to drop the volts.
E-cigs use Li-Ions.
Most commercial e-cig batts use some sort of electronics to drop/meter/regulate a Li-Ions voltage, hence an eGo comes in at ~3.1V or so vaping/loaded volts whereas a naked 18650 may start out out at ~3.8V.
KY, that looped winding of yours is brilliant in my opinion. Makes my mind dizzy with new ideas. Thanks for sharing.
My apologies for taking so long to respond gents - have been busy at work.
I am in the process of making another atty and will take some nice pitures as I go along.
Sofar as the cigar shield: All I did was to look for a nice picture of a tobacco leaf, printed on an A3 sheet of normal paper, cut a long strip (about 300mm x 25mm) of the picture where the natural leaf tones looks nice and rolled that around the atty and battery. Once properly rolled, I painted it on the outside with a two part clear epoxy coat and waited for it to dry. I then cut the shield on the atty / battery split as well as the atomizer cap.
I did however find that the epoxy sometimes doesn't penetrate the paper properly and when cleaning the assembly it can absorb water causing decolourisation of the printed paper in some places.
At the moment my PV has a shiny stainless steel appearance - will get back to the cigar look when done with the new atomizer.
I'm still using this atomizer design: It delivers great TH and taste and is easy to maintain.
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l3oertjie, I'm curious, just how small is that?
l3oertjie, where did you get it? What make/model?