My first e-cig was a mod with an atty and a drip tip. It was all I had for several months, so I figured it out pretty quickly and never had much trouble dripping... That said: A few friends who have taken up vaping didn't find dripping to be as easy as I did. But, I've gotten them all sorted out with the same two things:
A cisco 2.0 or 2.2 ohm atty and some 100% VG juice. Even though I read a lot of people saying 100% VG is tough on attys, it does happen to be more forgiving to drippers than thinner juice. It sticks to the coil better, doesn't scorch as easily, and produces more vapor even when the atty is a bit flooded. - I would suppose any atty that is a good match to your voltage will do, but I like the Ciscos because they come without primer and therefore don't require cleaning before use.
So, there's my suggestion. Get an atty with no primer to remove (primer tastes bad - if you don't get a no primer atty, make sure you clean whatever atty you get very well before use), and pick up some 100% or at least High VG ratio juice to use while you get the hang of dripping. - Once you get the hang of it, then revisit your thinner juices.
A cisco 2.0 or 2.2 ohm atty and some 100% VG juice. Even though I read a lot of people saying 100% VG is tough on attys, it does happen to be more forgiving to drippers than thinner juice. It sticks to the coil better, doesn't scorch as easily, and produces more vapor even when the atty is a bit flooded. - I would suppose any atty that is a good match to your voltage will do, but I like the Ciscos because they come without primer and therefore don't require cleaning before use.
So, there's my suggestion. Get an atty with no primer to remove (primer tastes bad - if you don't get a no primer atty, make sure you clean whatever atty you get very well before use), and pick up some 100% or at least High VG ratio juice to use while you get the hang of dripping. - Once you get the hang of it, then revisit your thinner juices.