Inspects,
What you bought---a ten-pack of Joyetech SR510 2.2-ohm atties with a VaporKings logo---is fine. They'll work with any PV that provides power in the "standard" voltage range (3.3-4.8 volts)---mechanicals, eGos, Twists/Spinners, ZMaxes/VAMOs, regulated boxes, whatever. They're atomizers, not cartomizers, with horizontal coils in ceramic cups over which are inverted-V-shaped strip metal bridges wrapped in fine wire mesh that provide the wicking. You can even convert them into "bridgeless" atties (where you drip eliquid directly onto the coils) by pulling out the bridges with a pair of needlenose pliers. Some 510 atties are produced and sold as bridgeless---the "bridged-versus-bridgeless" debate was a hot topic on ECF way back when. All those threads are buried in the archives.
Your new "disposable" atties work just like RDAs---you drip eliquid by drops into the open end of the barrel or through whatever drip tip you use on them. [By the way, that's why drip tips are called "drip" tips. They were first marketed back in 2010-2011 for use with those very atomizers you just bought, as well as for cartomizers, which were gaining favor at that time---various kinds of tanks came soon after that (veterans will remember syringe-mod carto tanks from 2011). Nhaler was the first vendor I remember to carry drip tips. They were plastic or delrin, and ridiculously expensive---about $7 each, plus shipping. We bought them anyway, because all vaping hardware was more expensive back then. Aluminum, stainless steel, glass, and ceramic drip tips came later.]
I see some posters tonight belittling 510 atties in favor of rebuildable drippers. That is by no means a universally-held opinion. Many people love old-school Joyetech 510 atties. VaporKings sells 'em by the truckload. That's one of the great things about vaping---people can use whatever hardware pleases them.
Dripping as a vaping technique waxes and wanes in popularity. For awhile, cartos, clearos, and tanks made it seem that dripping was becoming passé. When rebuildable atties showed up in the marketplace (RBA/RDA/RTA), dripping seemingly roared back for RDAs, but the truth is that dripping never went away. While some hardware does vanish from the vaping scene (remember blue foam in cartridges?), much older hardware remains viable despite the latest-and-greatest new thing to hit the marketplace.
While refinements in hardware occur these days at breakneck speed as the vaping industry enters its aggressive, hyper-competitive adolescence, the basic technology of vaping remains the same as it's been since the very beginning a decade ago in 2005: metal coils that are heated by voltage from a battery to vaporize eliquid. Will vaping be based on that formula forever? I don't know, but so far there's no indication that it will change fundamentally any time soon. Even something like "temperature control" is essentially a refinement on the basic technology, rather than a revolutionary change. I mean, an RDA with sub-ohm twisted quad coils on a 26650 mechanical or a tank with sub-ohm OCC-wicked vertical coils on a 150-watt box mod are both finally just more powerful and sophisticated versions of a simple 510 atomizer atop an eGo battery (or an 808-d 220mAh cig-a-like, if we want to reach even further back).