Ive had my Black Evo for about four days now, and I thought it is time to write a short review on it.
Bearing in mind im fairly new to vaping, only been doing it for about a month or so.
My first e-cig was an RN4081 'Super-Mini'. A baseline capable e-cig. Average vapour, on-off unreliable throat hit, very short cartridge lifespan. For the month I was using it, one question would repeat itself : Is it worth 'upgrading' to something like the Evo?. I had spent a fair bit of money on setting myself up with the RN4081, a bandoleer of batteries, multiple atomisers, a fair few carts, and a couple of dripping bottles. Could the vaping experience between my 4081, and the Evo be different enough to warrant jumping ship? The answer, for all those newbies in my position, is yes. Very much so.
Battery life of the Might Atom batts is around about the same as an RN4081, perhaps a little longer. The drag is similar too. The main differences are in the throat-hit and the vapour production.
The Evo consistently produces as much vapour as a fully dipped RN4081 with a fresh battery. This is preceded by a throat-hit in excess of a fully loaded RN4081. The vapour can feel slightly 'dry' when compared, but that is no big problem for me.
The slightly smaller width of the Evo considerably lends itself to that feeling of 'Im smoking a cigarette', rather than 'Im smoking something that is close to a cigarette, but not quite.' as with the RN4081. The lesser weight of the Evo also makes handling it, and the feeling of regular 'smoking', more believable to those vaping it.
So, from one newbie to another, I can heartily recommend making the jump. There will be many users out there who have purchased something akin to an RN4081, and then discovered ECF, and are sat there thinking 'Should I?...'. Personally, I say you should.
Bearing in mind im fairly new to vaping, only been doing it for about a month or so.
My first e-cig was an RN4081 'Super-Mini'. A baseline capable e-cig. Average vapour, on-off unreliable throat hit, very short cartridge lifespan. For the month I was using it, one question would repeat itself : Is it worth 'upgrading' to something like the Evo?. I had spent a fair bit of money on setting myself up with the RN4081, a bandoleer of batteries, multiple atomisers, a fair few carts, and a couple of dripping bottles. Could the vaping experience between my 4081, and the Evo be different enough to warrant jumping ship? The answer, for all those newbies in my position, is yes. Very much so.
Battery life of the Might Atom batts is around about the same as an RN4081, perhaps a little longer. The drag is similar too. The main differences are in the throat-hit and the vapour production.
The Evo consistently produces as much vapour as a fully dipped RN4081 with a fresh battery. This is preceded by a throat-hit in excess of a fully loaded RN4081. The vapour can feel slightly 'dry' when compared, but that is no big problem for me.
The slightly smaller width of the Evo considerably lends itself to that feeling of 'Im smoking a cigarette', rather than 'Im smoking something that is close to a cigarette, but not quite.' as with the RN4081. The lesser weight of the Evo also makes handling it, and the feeling of regular 'smoking', more believable to those vaping it.
So, from one newbie to another, I can heartily recommend making the jump. There will be many users out there who have purchased something akin to an RN4081, and then discovered ECF, and are sat there thinking 'Should I?...'. Personally, I say you should.
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