KV, as long as I can get atomizers for less than $6.00 a copy delivered, I'm happy. I'll be even happier if they last a few weeks each. I don't really want to get into the politics but the price and availability can quickly change and we are the only ones who will change the reliability and longevity.
I won't be caught all dressed up with no place to go if and when
ejuice is classified as an illegal drug and the ecig is determined to be paraphernalia. What we have now is a tiny and insignificant "cottage industry" just beginning to show on the radar of giants with deep pockets who can and will squash it like a bug.
I've already laid away enough of our favorite juices to last us for years and I intend to be prepared in all other ways too. As in all areas of life, self-sufficiency rules and dependency drools. In
vaping, the atomizer is the weak link. If they go up to $25 each and they're nothing but the same old junk, I won't be happy.
Rebuilding these things can't be all that difficult. With enough good minds sourcing the few things we need and others doing the math, we can soon have ourselves a quick and easy rebuild.
Basically, all we need is a way to get rid of the bridge, the best thing to use for pluggable sockets able to accept a long-tailed coil and replace the flimsy wire (think copper cap tube), standardized measurements and methods for winding a coil and the best way to unitize the atomizer parts after doing the
mod. With this accomplished, when we blow a coil we pop the guts, plug in a freshly wicked and wound coil (think threading a needle), put the unit back in the shell and go on about our business.