Issues with Aspire BVC on the Nautilus Mini

Status
Not open for further replies.
I'm a bit out of the loop here, I stepped away from the vaping scene a few years ago due to financial constraints that are no longer an issue. I recently purchased a nautilus Mini from my local juice shop and I use a innokiin itaste VV ver 3.0 as my go to battery I have a few old regular eGos ( eGi?) floating around as well. Somehow I have managed to burn through both of the standard BVC atomizers that came with the Nautilus Mini and an entire pack of them as well in a little over 10 days! This should not be.I have not adjusted the settings on the VV ( so still stock at v 3.3 and p 6.0) because I am not quite comfortable with that yet. So what could be the cause of this? It's just irking me that I've burned through so many so quick.
 

nic_fix

Account closed on request
ECF Veteran
Oct 16, 2013
1,186
756
USA
too low power will cause residue to not burn off the coil. it builds up and soon it is done. the itaste really maxes out before what the bvc even needs. you can run the 1.8 very comfortably at 12 watts and as much as 15. you will know if it is your juice then. cheap juice will burn at that but good juice will be good.
 
I can confirm they are authentic according to the Aspire site. In an act of desperation i took several apart that had died the wire running from the base to the fill was completely charred and broken in areas on all of them. So I decided to look at the fill material it seems to be like an ashy poly/cotton blend.that disintegrates at a touch. Any ideas ?
 

Topwater Elvis

Vaping Master
ECF Veteran
Dec 26, 2012
7,116
16,502
Texas
I can confirm they are authentic according to the Aspire site. In an act of desperation i took several apart that had died the wire running from the base to the fill was completely charred and broken in areas on all of them. So I decided to look at the fill material it seems to be like an ashy poly/cotton blend.that disintegrates at a touch. Any ideas ?

Aspire calls it bio ceramic fill, ceramic disks, insulators & cloths are nothing new to vaping.
 

WharfRat1976

Vaping Master
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
May 31, 2014
4,731
5,981
Austin, Texas
Not priming the coil properly can burn it out instantly. I prime with juice directly into the coil until fully saturated. I then screw on a full tank and take some long slow dry pulls w/o firing. I then let it sit for 5 minutes. Sometimes I will cover the air hole during these primer pulls to make sure the juice in the tank is connecting with the coil.

I then do a few short burst pulses at 7 watts....I do more dry pulls....I slowly increase the firing and vape it slowly. When I feel it is good and primed and operating well, with good flavor and vapor I up my wattage to say 9 watts then proceed from there until I hit a sweet spot.

Break the coils in slowly and they will become your friend:)

Sometimes you get a bad batch of coils and whatever you do fails.
 

johnsoncook

Moved On
Oct 13, 2014
0
7
Shanghai, China
  • Deleted by retired1
  • Reason: Unregistered supplier

WharfRat1976

Vaping Master
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
May 31, 2014
4,731
5,981
Austin, Texas
I just wonder does the resistence of e-liquid matter?:confused:

Not the resistance but the thickness or lack of viscosity. Heavier VG juices will gunk or render coils useless. They burn them out quicker. Higher ohm coils like a 1.8 ohm BVC coil have a hard time processing thicker juices. VG is thicker than maple syrup. 70% and higher VG juices are better vaped in low ohm setups or "sub-ohm" setups.

So the answer is yes, the mixture of e-liquid matters.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Users who are viewing this thread