I just received my protank mini and it is a truly awesome little tank. However, I heard that the original protank and protank mini use glue as part of their materials. Does that mean i can't use dangerous juices such as cinnamon?
Never had an issue myself... I have had several protank and only have had to replace them when I needed a new base plate, before numerous sites started selling those by themselves. If the protank is taken care of, it should not be a problem.
I have 2 Mini ProTank's and 1 ProTank and have been exclusively vaping CinnaGEEK in them for over a month now. I have had no leak issues. The coloring is seeping into the adhesive that attaches the glass to the stainless steel parts, but it produces no leakage. I love everything about my ProTanks. I love them even more now that I have a K100 and have put the eGo 1100's in the "emergency use" bin.
My only concern would be with the glue they use. The rest is glass and metal. Those are not going to care. I don't have the mini but the old V1 and V1.5. I have a V1 regular size which may be leaking from the bottom of the glass and I do have tank melter juice in it. So I don't know if it is the glue melting or what. From here on out I will be buying Davide Glassomerizers. Those will not care. NO glue. It may not be the juice on my V1 Protank it is the oldest one I have so it just may be that the glue is letting go. Will see.
If you look at how they are assembled, the metal is attached to the outside if the glass. Any adhesive used shouldn't come in contact with the liquid in the tank.
Edward Neuman (sp?) from Sun Vapers dug into the glued PT issue since it was his brainchild. The conclusion was that it was related to heat, not juice. Also, Kanger is soon to release the mini Protank II soon. It is a glueless glassomizer.
Edward Neuman (sp?) from Sun Vapers dug into the glued PT issue since it was his brainchild. The conclusion was that it was related to heat, not juice. Also, Kanger is soon to release the mini Protank II soon. It is a glueless glassomizer.
Any leakage issue caused isn't directly responsible for a higher acidic liquid. Glass is glass, no liquid can crack that. Brute force on the other hand...
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.