Kanger T2 Vs T3

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MikeZA

Full Member
Nov 6, 2012
18
19
trinity, florida
Hi all,

I'm new here at ECF and maybe a little late on this thread...I've been vaping the T-2 and T-3 for a while now. For the most part I think they are pretty equal.
Pros to the T-2 are:
A little easier to clean and dry
Cheaper cost for unit and attys
Warmer hit

Pro to the T-3 are:
Better overall sealing system
Holds .6 more liquid
Stiffer draw (this is more personal preference)
From an atty rebuilding point (I have rebuilt both several times) the T-3 is much easier

Mike
 

vapmex

Senior Member
ECF Veteran
Oct 19, 2012
127
31
Mexico
Agree with most of the points except the atty rebuild, I found that rebuilding the T2 is easier than the T3 although I don't mean that rebuilding any of these is easy :)

Hi all,

I'm new here at ECF and maybe a little late on this thread...I've been vaping the T-2 and T-3 for a while now. For the most part I think they are pretty equal.
Pros to the T-2 are:
A little easier to clean and dry
Cheaper cost for unit and attys
Warmer hit

Pro to the T-3 are:
Better overall sealing system
Holds .6 more liquid
Stiffer draw (this is more personal preference)
From an atty rebuilding point (I have rebuilt both several times) the T-3 is much easier

Mike
 

Tsuki

Senior Member
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Sep 2, 2011
81
15
CA
I think if you find t3 easy to rebuild, you have very small hands or really amazing customized tools. My hands are small compared to my husband's and I lost part of my coil filament whilst attempting to pull the centerpin down a bit (it just fished up into the post...) I gave up trying to pull it back down because it was that annoying. There's really not much room to work with there, you have to be sort of an engineer to pull off that maneuver.
 

y cherry y

Ultra Member
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Nov 18, 2012
1,514
6,390
Ypsilanti, MI
Both of these work well. Before I tried them, I read many posts about how they were leaky and unreliable, but I haven't had leaking problems at all. I've used maybe ten different ones and had no trouble. Several, though, had terrible plasticky taste at first. I saw a suggestion that they be soaked in vodka and rinsed and air-dried before use, tried it, and have had no further taste problems. So, my method with all Kangers (or "Ego CC"-branded clearomizers) is to soak them for at least an hour, rinse under cold water and fluff the wicks, soak again, rinse again, and dry for a day. I use almost nothing else now.
 
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