still waiting for some redneck pictures, lol
Yeah, yeah... and I'm waiting for the wife to get home with the camera.
still waiting for some redneck pictures, lol
Yeah, yeah...Camera's at home.
Waiting for the wife to take the pictures.
We know![]()
Whoa, someone has a sensitive spot.
I imagine you could even customize the thickness of the cushion grip for someone with big hands.I like it...I really like how the tape lines look nice and parallel. A lot of time went into the rednecking of this device
Or beings this is vaping and not a lunar rocket launch you could simply turn your adjustment to the desired vaping experience and get on with your day. Which I'm sure 99% of the VV users do.First off, really nice looking mod.
Second off, really nice looking mod.
I see that you are getting uh a little resistance to the adjustable power concept. I think a little more in depth explanation would help others understand the benefit of dialing in power instead of voltage or current. BTW, this is typically done when tuning up a radio transmitter, to lets say 500 watts.
If you can imagine a circuit (shunt resistance with a voltmeter across it) to measure series atty current, and another circuit to measure voltage applied to the atty, with two digital displays, you could manually calculate watts without actually knowing that you knew the atty resistance. Follow? So lets say you have this breadboard kluge with a regulated variable voltage supply, a couple of meters, shunt, etc., and a calculator, and want to vape at 10 watts today. You could adjust the voltage, read both meters, calculate the watts delivered to the atty, darn only 9 watts, turn it up a little, 9.6 watts, closer, turn it up a little more, ta da 10.0 watts. If your battery voltage drops, the regulator will compensate (we're used to that, right?) and the power delivered to the atty stays at ten watts. (wonder what atty resistance is?, don't care)
The process is read volts, read current, multiply, adjust until the 3rd display (the calculator display) reads 10 watts. We can do that. Still with me?
Change to a different atty resistance, read volts, read current, multiply, adjust up or down until calculator display reads the 10 watts again. Don't go away just yet.
What if you had a microprocessor read the volts, read the amps, multiply them together, and display the result in watts? Now, I'm not calling anyone a dummy, but it would not take a lot of computing power to do what we could do with a couple of cheap meters and a calculator
Is this easier to interpret than adjusting a VV mod to a desired voltage? If you change attys a lot, yes. You might like 4.6 volts with a 2.3 ohm atty (9.2 watts), but if you put a 2.0 ohm atty what voltage would you adjust your VV mod to get the same watts? Go ahead, punch it out on the calculatorI'll give you a hint: It ain't 4.6 volts no more.
(rocket scientists can do it in their head)
If you are a 10 watt vaper, set your mod for 10 watts. If you are a 5 volt vaper, set your mod to 5 volts. Which one is easier for you to figure out for different ohm attys? You do know the resistance of all your attys, right?
So, guessing, I would say there is a calibrated shunt, and three analog to digital inputs (read volts, read amps, read adjusting pot) on a PIC (or similar) processor that calculates, and displays the dialed in watts, and a D to A output to control the regulator, which I hope is not an old fashioned linear type. Based on thickness of the device 14mm diameter batteries would be a tight fit as the total (in metric decimal) thickness is 15.9mm. Do we have two 14670 cells in there? Or just a pair of 14500s?
Now, regulating both voltage and current interdependently not independently with a single regulating device to produce a single final result (watts) still complies with ohms law.
Rocket
on a serious note, you gonna compare performance (like charge life) to something sort of standard?
Sometimes these "lasts all day" reviews end up being uh, subjective.
Sounds like mumbo jumbo to me.
In a "typical vv device" when you raise (control) the voltage you are also raising (controlling) the amps (current) and the watts (power). Anyone who has a VV PV already has the ability to control the volts, amps, and watts (power).
Ohm's law states that the current through a conductor between two points is directly proportional to the potential difference or voltage across the two points, and inversely proportional to the resistance between them.
the Darwin will take that into account and adjust volts/amps to keep the wattage at a consistent level. I believe I have that right.
Spoken like a true geek.
I'm proud of ya boy![]()