Ive been using rebuildable atomizers for a while now, but the worries of having a short still worries me. I have a atty, carto multimeter to make sure the device is working. I used to always put my new builds on an ego type of battery just to be sure. Lately, I dont test it out on the ego battery. I make sure it has an ohm reading so I assume no shorts.
So I still worry, if I were to get an electrical short on my atomizer which would it be less bad for it to happen, a mechanical PV or a PV like a Saber Touch? I used to think the saber touch was mechanical, but now Im not sure. If a mechanical mod makes contact to the battery via contacts not wires, if it should short, would it only damage the battery? If a PV has electronics such as some sort of board, Im assuming that would fry.
Would one of those 2 cents for safety devices save a PV with electronics from a short in an atty? or just from a faulty battery. Thank you for any opinions.
So I still worry, if I were to get an electrical short on my atomizer which would it be less bad for it to happen, a mechanical PV or a PV like a Saber Touch? I used to think the saber touch was mechanical, but now Im not sure. If a mechanical mod makes contact to the battery via contacts not wires, if it should short, would it only damage the battery? If a PV has electronics such as some sort of board, Im assuming that would fry.
Would one of those 2 cents for safety devices save a PV with electronics from a short in an atty? or just from a faulty battery. Thank you for any opinions.