And I've respected your posts and info but
he's being advised to buy VV when he doesn't know yet whether or not he needs/ wants VV. in my experience of converting people
I've found most do [did you mean to say "don't"?]really need a VV. Myself I smoked 1PAD very strong analogs was gifted a Provari and quickly discovered I had no need for it
[And I still don't "get" that] . I find that's it's far more critical and important to have the proper Nic level and delivery device- carto, tank, etc for new vapors.
In the end it really doesn't matter to me which PV he [chooses] as long as he kicks the stinkies to the curb. Also note I gave you a like for you very detailed [recent] post.
Cheers.
P.S. Converted 3 more people last night
Vap, thanks for the kind words, and dissenting opinions. First and foremost, I want to convey my dissent to your dissent in the most agreeable and cooperative fashion possible so that you will ideally become an ally and not an opponent.
I've repeatedly made the analogy that this is a war; a war against death and disease. In war, one needs allies, and the best weapons possible. Variable voltage is a better weapon than constant voltage. It just is. Thanks largely to the Joyetech Twist, we now have the rough equivalent of an M16/AR15 that costs about the same as an M1 Garand. To me, there is no question that a variable voltage PV will better defeat the enemy - or as you say, "[kick] the stinkies to the curb" - so that puts me on the other side of "in the end it really doesn't matter to me which PV he [chooses]".
It does matter to me. In virtually every case, variable voltage will give a better overall vaping experience than will constant voltage. It just will.
This is an interesting thread:
http://www.e-cigarette-forum.com/fo...866-why-does-ego-c-get-such-bad-rap-site.html
In it, someone says that his vape with a Joyetech eGo (fixed 3.4V) battery is "perfect". I then suggest that it might just be "more perfect" with a variable voltage Twist. And it would be. IMO there is no reasonable argument to be made that constant voltage is in any way superior to variable voltage. The flip side of that is that I don't think any reasonable argument can be made that anyone - beginner, intermediate, or "expert" - should be without variable voltage.
When two Twist batteries can be had for $38, there is just no way in hell that I'm going to recommend to anyone that they get two kGo batteries instead for only slightly less than that. I'm just not.
I turned someone from "The Dark Side" myself yesterday. Spur of the moment thing; I had brought a kit over to a friend's house last night - two Twists, two Smoktech 3.5ml DCT tanks, five slotted Boge 2.0 ohm single coil XL cartos, charger, drip tip, and juice - but she had to leave before I got there. Her ex-smoker Dad was there, and her brother (smoking a big, fat stogie), and his girlfriend, smoking a ..... The girlfriend left with the kit and a new outlook (and lease) on life. It took me about 5 seconds to explain to her that for more heat to the coil, you turn the knob clockwise. Would she be better off with two kGo batteries? No. No, she would not.
Far too much deference is given on this site to beginners who very often don't really know what they want. They might think they know what they want, but it is impossible for them to have reasons that are as valid as they might think they are. They don't know what more experienced people know. They just don't. How could they? Why would they? It's OK that people don't know everything about everything. It would be a very odd state of affairs if they did.
That said, one place where we have to defer to a beginner's preferences is in "form factor". They do know what size and shape they want, and if they want a ciggie look-alike, then I will recommend a Volt. But I might very well also offer a long-term strategy; get a Volt, and if you end up wanting more battery life, vaping time, convenience, vapor production, or variable voltage, then get one of about five variable voltage devices, and one or more of maybe a half-dozen different attachments. And some great juice. Lots of it.
This is really not all that complicated. It's really pretty simple. And I think to keep it as simple as possible, I think it would be nice if we could all get "on the same page" as much as possible, and among the contents of that page is (IMO) that variable voltage will give you a better overall vape, under a wider range of conditions, than constant voltage. I simply do not see how a valid argument to the contrary can possibly be made.
In conclusion: peace out, vape on, and death to cigarettes and Big Tobacco.