Hi everyone, I'm new. I was told to come here.
vaped for years with temperature control
vaped for years with temperature control
Started with Ti and moved to SS.TA1 and arctic fox mod
No disposables and PODs, not trusting ceramic at all.If you do things other than disposables this is the place. There is disposable stuff too but it hasn’t taken totally over.
I tried KA1 and SS at first, feeling TA1 might be better, in mind, and using it for years. For TC, it seems the TCR of TA1 is better than SS.Started with Ti and moved to SS.
I always wanted to try TC with zirconium wire, but I gave up and returned to my 18650 mech squonker roots using Ni80.
My AF devices are all older joye/eleaf vtc mini/picos.
I would likely choose a DNA device if I ever needed TC capabilities again.
Cheers
I
Huh? Ceramic is a wick type.No disposables and PODs, not trusting ceramic at all.
Yeah. There are all kinds of problems with ceramics. There are reasons you don’t see them anymore. I’ve never thrown one in an ultrasonic cleaner and don’t even own one, but I could definitely see that happening. The whole “cleaning with microscopic explosions” thing ultrasonic cleaners do wouldn’t be great for microscopic pore structures made of ceramic.Yes, the "ceramic" is kind of a wick type. But please forgive me for the misleading. The "ceramic" I mentioned is the ceramic parts of heating elements used in many PODs, looks like porous solid.
I made some simple tests on these "ceramics", and they are fragile.
As I understand, the vaping process is somewhat similar to ultrasonic cleaning with micro bubble bursts; in this situation, the "ceramic" might break into dust and be sucked into the lungs....
Correct me if I'm wrong, and sorry for my poor English; it's not my native; I had to google translate myself for some parts.
It's great to meet people who have good imagination.Yeah. There are all kinds of problems with ceramics. There are reasons you don’t see them anymore. I’ve never thrown one in an ultrasonic cleaner and don’t even own one, but I could definitely see that happening. The whole “cleaning with microscopic explosions” thing ultrasonic cleaners do wouldn’t be great for microscopic pore structures made of ceramic.
I recently watched a video on a porous metal sword that had flammable gas pumped into it to make a flaming sword. Worked pretty well. I do wonder what an ultrasonic cleaner would do to it. Maybe it’s tough enough and it works great. Maybe not so much.
I understand the more brittle gunk is the better ultrasonic cleaners work. It wouldn’t surprise me that the work well on carbon buildup the cleaned object needs to be either tough enough to withstand the explosions (metal jewelry) or soft enough to move without damage. Soft materials don’t work very well because they just absorb the explosions. So mostly they’re used for small intricate metal parts that are a bit of a PITA to clean otherwise. If you are trying to clean metal OFF something, a tough metal is going to suck.I
It's great to meet people who have good imagination.
I used to have an ultrasonic cleaner for a time. For cleaning oil and stains, it is never better than my dishwasher, not even close, not sure about how it can deal with carbon deposits on coil. The ultrasonic power of the ultrasonic cleaner is 80 W, maybe too low. There are some guys on YouTube DIY ultrasonic cleaners. I watched them testing tin foil in ultrasonic cleaners; it was interesting.
I agree with their conclusion: the ultrasonic is more effective on stains with cracks and gaps; bubbles appearing in could expand the gap and finally make stains break; so was soft metal, but for strong metal, it is not so effective.
Welcome and glad you joined.Hi everyone, I'm new. I was told to come here.
vaped for years with temperature control