Referring to the thread title, the odds of a Li-ion to explode are still somewhere below 1:10,000,000. Then there are all those urban myths floating about that any and every battery can explode out of the blue, especially unbranded ones.
The perpretrators of those myths always fail to mention two things:
1. Many unbranded and branded batteries are manufactured in the exact same factory with the exact same materials and quality control. The only difference is that the brand logo is printed on one but not on the other.
2. The few reported cases where a Li-ion exploded are either knowingly or very likely to have been mishandled in one way or another, ie. left in the car in the hot summer sun for hours or otherwise overheated, dropped on the floor several times, short circuited etc.
The 'funniest' case I've heard was a bloke who carried a Li-ion in his pocket together with coins and other metal bits. Let's be realistic - that guy has been asking for his battery to explode.![]()
Well... we have had 4 cases of this with battery mods in the very recent past. All using 2x3v. I'm guessing that's WAY over 1:10,000,000. Admittedly a small sample size but tends to imply this application may make that probability somewhat higher.
So far, it seems that driving a regular atomizer with 2x3v in "burst" mode is pretty reasonable. Sustained maybe not so much but we don't turn these things on like a flashlight. Even if you were chain vaping I believe that you would be heating up the batteries fairly gradually. Probably slowly enough that there would be plenty of time for heat transfer through the casing of the mod to where you'd feel it in your hand well before it got to temperatures necessary for failure (assuming a non-defective battery).
From reading, with my limited knowledge, I still don't have a good grip on this "mismatched cell" business. Is that mainly in the context of charging? Or are there dramatic effects during usage? They always say that it's important to have multiple cells very close in charge, etc. During usage if one of your two cells was mostly discharged and the other mostly charged what is the effect? Intuitively (haha) I would expect the "pack" to behave like the least charged cell in it. Is that true? Is that all? Would you be overheating (rapidly) or stressing one or the other cell?