if im thinking this correctly all i need to make my own e juice is flavor concentrate or doubler , and some pg and vg solution correct?
Depends on how accurate you require your final PG/VG percentage to be. Sure, it'll work, and especially for just one flavor. But other different flavors and nic strengths require different amounts added to the base to get the flavor/strength you want. Since most of the flavors come in a PG base, and many nic suppliers dilute their product the same way, you'll change the final ratio adding them.Let me ask you experts this (and I've been diy-ing for 8 or so months) If I were to make a large base mix of 30 pg, 70 vg, zero nic
Like maybe 240 ml large, then on e-liquid making days, I could just grab that base mix and make a few 30 ml flavors, adding nic at that time. Does anyone do it this way? It seems like it would work ?
if im thinking this correctly all i need to make my own e juice is flavor concentrate or doubler , and some pg and vg solution correct?
Let me ask you experts this (and I've been diy-ing for 8 or so months) If I were to make a large base mix of 30 pg, 70 vg, zero nic
Like maybe 240 ml large, then on e-liquid making days, I could just grab that base mix and make a few 30 ml flavors, adding nic at that time. Does anyone do it this way? It seems like it would work ?
if im thinking this correctly all i need to make my own e juice is flavor concentrate or doubler , and some pg and vg solution correct?
Short answer: yesIt's not that complicated. Accurate measurement is key. I went online and bought lab glass pipettes for small batch work. You can make it up a half-liter at a time once you've got the recipe settled, and use bigger glass to make it, but when you're still working it out with a few more or less percent of this or that, making smaller batches for trial is the way to go. It's not easy to make 5 or 10 ml of a test batch using a cylindrical graduate. You might wind up needing .76ml of nic juice, .3-.7ml of several flavors and <4ml each of PG/VG. This is hard to measure, and adjusting the flavors in tiny percentages to get what you want is the object of the exercise. Even a 10ml graduate is too big for that work.
Any graduated cylinder/pipette etc. is less accurate than weight based measurement. My scale goes to .01 grams. That is 1/3 of an average drop.