Is it safe to mix different e-liquids?

Status
Not open for further replies.

catalinaflyer

Super Member
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Oct 1, 2013
704
1,565
FL 510 (Over The Top Baby)
Just curious, here. I've heard that it is, but is there any reason to believe that mixing certain juices might be a no-no? Lately, I've been experimenting with mixing Halo Juiced with some random (but tasty) 100% VG peach that I have kicking around. Also mixing different Halo juices...
From a scientific standpoint, I see nothing in any e-juice that could possibly react with anything in another e-juice. Now from a flavor standpoint, well sometimes things when mixed can wind up tasting nothing like the original separate ingredients.
 

Orb Skewer

Ultra Member
ECF Veteran
Oct 19, 2011
1,230
2,459
Terra firma
Its a bit like paint-perfectly safe, but one flavour (sublime) and another flavour (also sublime) on their own can be framed, two flavours which are sublime can turn out to be a masterpiece, however, they can-like mixing paint turn out to be either (in flavour-not colour) brown, purplish brown, browny purplish and everything in between.
 

~Ricky~

Senior Member
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Dec 22, 2013
122
120
61
Enterprise, Alabama
I have a relatively empty bottle that I use to mix my "leftover" juices in, or juices that I don't care for but that won't taint the rest of the bottle too much. I call it my Goulash sauce. I'm not really partial to mint or menthal, so I don't dump any of that in there, and I keep the fruity flavors to a minimum, so the bottle is mostly a tart, creamy, vanilla, chocolate, coffee, caramel tobacco sort of taste that I love, but that will never be seen again as I have no idea what all I have thrown into it, lol.
 

HauntedMyst

Vaping Master
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Mar 18, 2013
4,670
17,854
Chicago
I mixed juices once. I was a big mistake. I mixed some tooty fruity wonder booty 100% Propylene glycol with what I thought was Blueberry Blush 100% Vegetable glycerin. Turns out the 100% Vegetable glycerin was 100% Nitro glycerin from my days of trying to make my own dragster fuel. (Dragster fuel is nitro methane. I thought I could make my own "green" version by mixing nitro glycerin with methane from cow flatulence but getting the cows to wear a balloon on their rectums turned out to be more trouble than it was worth. I got kicked like 4 times before I gave up shoving those damn balloons in their @sses) While my quest to mix juices was unsuccessful, my quest for speed was. The doctors estimated my lips hit 250 miles an hour based on how long it took them to dig them out of the wall so they could sew them back on. Everyone at the hospital gave me a cool nickname for the first time in my life. They called me "Speed".
 
Last edited:

generic mutant

Ultra Member
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Apr 9, 2013
1,548
2,052
UK
The two or more juices that you mix are solutions that are for all practical purposes identical except for nicotine concentration, flavoring, and % PG. These are all safe and there is no chemical reactions going on that may change the solution, so it is indeed safe to mix different e-liquids.

I don't understand this.

Are you all saying that every flavour that could possibly be used, in any juice, will not react with every other flavour that could possibly be used?

Of course there could be a reaction. It maybe isn't that likely, because I imagine only fairly stable chemicals are used. It is probable that the product, if there was a significant reaction, would throw the taste off, and you'd be able to tell something was off.

But claiming there will never be a reaction between two e-liquids? This is crazy talk.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Users who are viewing this thread