If e liquid leaked into battery unit, will that cause problems?

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talon2525

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Sep 14, 2013
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Getting e-juice in your battery isn't a real good idea as it can short out the electronics and cause your battery to not fire or in extreme cases it could even burn up.
That being said, I like to drip and I usually get some juice in my 510 connector. I don't use any automatic batts (all are manual) so a little juice in the connector isn't an issue as it dosn't get into the battery. Though you do wanna clean it out before you charge it. (ego)

So I guess short- Juice in battery bad, Juice in connector not so much lol
Hope this helps
 

paulw2014

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Aug 13, 2012
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So I guess short- Juice in battery bad, Juice in connector not so much lol
Hope this helps

So I guess e-liquid is non-conductive then. I'm sure a lot of us have dealt with leaking clearos that literally drown the 510 connection in juice. Considering that the 510 connection is where the negative and positive terminals are, a conductive liquid would easily short out the battery right? Therefore, I guess e liquid is non-conductive.
 

Susaz

Vaping Master
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Jun 8, 2009
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One day I set my SVD from FT upright and I saw ejuice coming out the battery cap. Shortly after it stopped working. I wonder if the original SVD is sealed, otherwise is a nono. All clearos, specially those like protank and evod that have no shielding will leak a little through the battery connection. It's unavoidable, and a no brainer. No more SVDs for me again.
 
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