Delrin is an insulator. If it wasn't it would be bypassing the switch leaving the device on at all times.
Well. the Prodigy was the clear winner, but apparently they don't make it anymore.
Please correct me if I'm wrong, but it looks like neither the Prodigy V2 or the Protege run @ 5v.
![]()
As I understand it from the explanation given to me by a friend who is an Electrical Engineer at Tektronics, a partially conductive material will draw some energy out of the creating a bit of heat away from the atomizer changing the "shape" of the current, meaning that the voltage drop you get when you apply load is greater than when the cap is not applied. The net effect is that freshly charged RCR123a's start at about 5.5V net with the cap tightened (instead of the 6+volts you would expect from 2 fully charged 3V batteries), and then when the batteries drain to a certain point, the user can loosen the cap allowing the full voltage of the batteries to the atomizer extending the time vaping at 5V compared to mods that use a traditional resistor or regulator that caps the initial voltage.
As I understand it from the explanation given to me by a friend who is an Electrical Engineer at Tektronics, a partially conductive material will draw some energy out of the creating a bit of heat away from the atomizer changing the "shape" of the current, meaning that the voltage drop you get when you apply load is greater than when the cap is not applied. The net effect is that freshly charged RCR123a's start at about 5.5V net with the cap tightened (instead of the 6+volts you would expect from 2 fully charged 3V batteries), and then when the batteries drain to a certain point, the user can loosen the cap allowing the full voltage of the batteries to the atomizer extending the time vaping at 5V compared to mods that use a traditional resistor or regulator that caps the initial voltage.
As I understand it from the explanation given to me by a friend who is an Electrical Engineer at Tektronics, a partially conductive material will draw some energy out of the creating a bit of heat away from the atomizer changing the "shape" of the current, meaning that the voltage drop you get when you apply load is greater than when the cap is not applied.
I have used them all except a Nicostick, though I have a 5v Detonator-type.
The Prodigy is the best, IMHO.
The Prodigy is the only one that has:
- Interchangeable heads to use different atomizers (No adapters)
- Sealed from leakage getting inside
- Well around the atomizer to keep flooded juice contained
I also think it's the best size. And it has the best build quality of them all, easily.
I'm not a fan of the way the resistor is mounted in mine, but they have improved that since I got mine.
Even though the GLV doesn't have the features I listed above, it's a close second. I love the overall design with the offset atomizer, and I love the button - both feel and placement. The feel in the hand and balance is excellent. The biggest issue I have with the GLV is that the atomizer portion is open - flooding an atomizer will allow juice into a section of the GLV that is very difficult to clean. Color choice and text customization is a nice feature.
The XHaler... I never could get the XHaler to work at 5v - even measured it under load - and can't understand how it possibly could do so. I love the mechanical switch and despise the placement. I like the over feel - narrow and well-balanced. I like the choices of color/graphics. I hate the the 510 option is an adapter. All the 801s we have don't fit - they barely catch the threads, and you have to take the batteries out to attach it easily, and once attached there's no air flow.
5v/6v Detonator-style - I freaking love the ability to go 5v or 6v at the touch of a button. The body is too fat for the batteries - thin batteries need a inner PVC sleeve.
I am suddenly overwhelmed by a sense of déjà vu..obviously a blip in the matrix.
Dijon Vu: The feeling I've tasted this mustard before.
If people would stop talking about something they haven't tried for themself, perhaps this would not happen.
A friend whose opinion I respect did try one out and was unable to get any change in voltage. Apparently, the button contacts the inside of the body of the mod itself which would make it impossible at that point for the rear cap to have any effect. Electricity will always flow through the path of least resistance and the body's resistance is so low that it would not be possible to divert any of it.
Ask your EE friend.
I did ask my EE friend, I started to describe how it was designed to him and before I even finished describing he predicted how it could be done "Oh! So if it does <this> then <this> would happen." and then I finished describing it and he said "Yeah, that would <work>" (in more technical terms). Literally minutes later, Drew explained it to me and described exactly what my friend had predicted.
It's just one of those, "You're the expert, I'll take your word for it that it works." things.
Care to share? I would genuinely be interested in how current is or even could be diverted from a near zero resistance path without breaking the path in some way.
Go re-watch his video. Notice how when he's got the cap loose and button depressed, the reading goes straight to 6.64 and kinda sits there, without fluctuating? That would be the characteristic of measuring a pair of batteries, not an atomizer in use. Doesn't that strike you as the least bit odd? If that's supposed to be the definitive evidence of its dual-voltage capability, it's seriously lacking.
There is a video around that does explain how the video could be faked. In fact it was even posted on ECF by someone. Not me. It got a total of three views before "poof" gone no record of it ever being.
Are you accusing Drew of stopping the video, disconnecting the atomizer, and then seamlessly editing the video so that you can't see any change to the fact that the atomizer is still connected?? I've got several years experience in video production, and I don't see a jump cut. Do you? How did he manage to disconnect the load without there being some sort of visual movement? (You realize, don't you, that the voltmeter would not read 5.4V a few seconds earlier unless there was a load because the resistor only works when placed under load--which is WHY I couldn't simply test the voltage without wiring something between the Xhaler and the atomizer.