It's a race. All atties are out to kill all batteries, and all batteries are out to kill all atties.
Sooner or later, one of them is going to win.
It's a race. All atties are out to kill all batteries, and all batteries are out to kill all atties.
Sooner or later, one of them is going to win.
From all the post I've read about this subject, some pretty informed people have said yes and no.
That's not what I'm reading here... I see Yes and Maybe, I have yet to see a definitive "no" from a well informed respondent.
I'm sure someone has posted that massive thread about how they in fact do, I'm just here to confirm that after 5 months of LR use on my eGo batteries I've lost 2 to this problem.. It's a pain in the ..., ditched my ego over it.. I'm PVless
It's a race. All atties are out to kill all batteries, and all batteries are out to kill all atties.
Sooner or later, one of them is going to win.
MOSFETs are kind of like light bulbs. Some burn out faster than others due to normal manufacturing tolerances. So, the combination of no breathing room for the tolerances and normal manufacturing variations results in switches that can burn out due to the load. Some may hold up fine, others may not. I've had them die using just a standard resistance atty. BTW, I've dissassembled both the Joye eGo and Joye 510 (ones that died for the reason I stated above). They use the exact same electronics in both devices. The only difference is the battery.
Could be, I didn't measure, but normally, the resistance goes up as atomizers wear. In any case, there's no room to spare on those tolerances. The failure rate is high for these devices. I've experienced several myself..
I've read of many people seeing failures without ever putting a low resistance atomizer on them.
I was in the "atty/cartomizer resistance will go up with use" camp myself.... until I started paying close attention to it and making regular measurements. I was surprised to see the resistance actually go DOWN on my atties and my wife's cartos. And in almost every case I can get the resistance "back in spec" with an extended dry-burn. So that tells you volumes right there. And I can tell you FOR SURE, that virtually every one of my Bauway LR atties will dip below 1.3 Ohms after limited use, and will continue to go down if I don't react in a timely fashion. And when they hit about 1.1 Ohms, due to a flaw in the design of the "short circuit protection" in the eGo class units... the MOSFET will fail (at 3A, the design limit for the MOSFET). The Vishay MOSFETs that I use as replacements can usually survive the 1.1 Ohm atties since they're good to about 4.6A. At about .9 Ohm the short circuit protection actually kicks in and the eGo will protect itself by shutting down.
Which has pretty much been my point all along. It's not just the LR atties that develop coil-shorts or get "carboned up".. dropping their resistance into the eGo-fatal-zone.
I mostly use Boge 3 ohm cartomizers. By the time I'm done with one, it's usually gained about 10% in resistance. I only use the LR atties occasionally when dripping. Whether resistance goes up or down could be a materials thing with a particular make/model of carto/atty. In any case, a good circuit design accounts for variations and abuse in its application. Obviously, the eGo design does not. The fact you're replacing components yourself proves that. I mean really, a properly designed circuit should last pretty much forever.
Scott,
I tried to send this by PM but your mailbox is full
Hi Scott,
I have this tester:
Industrial Tool Display Page
I set the dial to "Ohm 1xk" to do this.
When I adjust the dial on the case on the left and get the probes to read zero when touching each other, every atty I test says zero. If I adjust it to read 1 when clicking the probes together, then the atties read 1 =)
I have one atty that I swear is a LR one- the vapor and heat it produces are exemplary compared to all my other 510 attys. It works twice as good as the others. That's why I'd liek to be able to test it.
Thank you if you can tell me what I'm doing wrong with the tester!
Lori