Yesterday one of my Aspire Vivi-Nova Pyrex tank coil heads became slow to vape and not producing much air flow or vapor. Now this coil head was about 14 days old. I had vaped about a total of 7-8 ml of a 50/50 VG-PG mix juice through it.
This is what I decided to do:
Now this is my first attempt at this, but appears to work spot on! Now I know I'll be able to at least get twice the life out of the coil head than I first thought.
I own a total of seven Aspire units; three Vivi Nova-style Pryex and four of the ET-S Pyrex, in addition I have four extra 1.8 ohm coil head replacements. In the future I'll just wait and when I have four dirty clogged heads, then I'll do the same process again. A little more energy and time efficient that way.
I hope that this little tutorial is of some benefit to the rest of those members which own the Aspire BDC clearomizer regardless of which type and style they have.
Happy Vaping and Happy Thanksgiving everyone!
This is what I decided to do:
- Removed the coil head and rinsed it under running warm water for about a minute or so.
- Then soaked it in 91% isopropyl alcohol for about 5 minutes.
- Let it air dry for about 5 minutes.
- Placed it in a small pan of boiling water at a slow boil for 15 minutes. One interesting observation is since the coil head was resting on the bottom of the pan, which is hotter than the water itself, the water was actually boiling through the coil head itself. Bubbles were exiting the end with the silicone washer. Therefore I'm assuming that water was cycling through the two small inlet holes and the pin end and boiling through the large end. I watched this for a minute or so to be sure that it wasn't just bubbles coming up around the head. They were actually exiting the head itself.
- I placed the head on a piece of aluminum foil in the oven set at 200 F for about an hour to ensure that is was thoroughly dried out.
- Took it out and let it cool down.
- Screwed it back into the base and screwed the base onto my SVD.
- Pulsed the SVD several times in a dry burn. The first two or three pulses produced a cloud of smoke (nasty smelling too), then another 5 pulses after that. The coils were glowing red and no trace of odor (except for hot coil odor) after that.
- Put my favorite juice in the tank, reassembled it and let is sit for 4-5 minutes.
- Did a few gentle pulls on the tank without firing it to make sure the head had juice in it.
- Started vaping it, the first two or three vapes were little light. Gave it a couple more gentle non-powered pulls, now it is back to what it was when brand new!
- As Archimedes said: EUREKA!
Now this is my first attempt at this, but appears to work spot on! Now I know I'll be able to at least get twice the life out of the coil head than I first thought.
I own a total of seven Aspire units; three Vivi Nova-style Pryex and four of the ET-S Pyrex, in addition I have four extra 1.8 ohm coil head replacements. In the future I'll just wait and when I have four dirty clogged heads, then I'll do the same process again. A little more energy and time efficient that way.
I hope that this little tutorial is of some benefit to the rest of those members which own the Aspire BDC clearomizer regardless of which type and style they have.
Happy Vaping and Happy Thanksgiving everyone!
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