This is a very serious question, it's one I've been having problems with since I started vaping:
The problem is that with any device I have ever tried (Protank, Aspire, Blu Cartos, CE4's, CE5's, Dripping Atty's, the list goes on...), any coffee or chocolate juice burns up right away, very first hit. It always tastes like burnt chocolate, say what you'd taste on burnt, crispy residue from a too-hot fondue pot or something. It happens with pre-filleds, drippers, and tanks. I do all the steps right, I don't want to hear about any of that. I also use Halo brand liquids for most of my tests because I can get them locally.
With my tests, I seem to prove that it's an ohm issue. Yet I still have no clue wether I need to go lower or higher. One theory is that chocolate and coffee juices are the most temperature sensitive and need an extremely high ohm range or extremely low voltage (3.2 ohms, or 3.0V's, numbers like that), or that these juices require an extremely high voltage or extremely low ohm range (4.8V's, or 1.5ohm coils, numbers like that) to vaporize the thick, sometimes very dark matter and prevent it from instantly gunking.
But I don't want to waste a ton of money trying to pinpoint the direction. It'd be a huge favor if everyone could list the numbers they vape chocolates and coffee's at, to see if there's any pattern or direction I should go in. I'm buying an Aurora BFT and I want to pair it with Stingray's, or whatever atomizers I need for these juices. But since the Stingray's and higher end atomizers aren't exactly cheap, I hope to pinpoint this issue before I buy.
Thank you!
The problem is that with any device I have ever tried (Protank, Aspire, Blu Cartos, CE4's, CE5's, Dripping Atty's, the list goes on...), any coffee or chocolate juice burns up right away, very first hit. It always tastes like burnt chocolate, say what you'd taste on burnt, crispy residue from a too-hot fondue pot or something. It happens with pre-filleds, drippers, and tanks. I do all the steps right, I don't want to hear about any of that. I also use Halo brand liquids for most of my tests because I can get them locally.
With my tests, I seem to prove that it's an ohm issue. Yet I still have no clue wether I need to go lower or higher. One theory is that chocolate and coffee juices are the most temperature sensitive and need an extremely high ohm range or extremely low voltage (3.2 ohms, or 3.0V's, numbers like that), or that these juices require an extremely high voltage or extremely low ohm range (4.8V's, or 1.5ohm coils, numbers like that) to vaporize the thick, sometimes very dark matter and prevent it from instantly gunking.
But I don't want to waste a ton of money trying to pinpoint the direction. It'd be a huge favor if everyone could list the numbers they vape chocolates and coffee's at, to see if there's any pattern or direction I should go in. I'm buying an Aurora BFT and I want to pair it with Stingray's, or whatever atomizers I need for these juices. But since the Stingray's and higher end atomizers aren't exactly cheap, I hope to pinpoint this issue before I buy.
Thank you!