Provari has a 3.5amp 15W limit right? Make sure you're not crossing one of those. It could be dumbing it down for you.
Also make sure your contacts on the Provari are clean. You may not be providing power efficiently.
Interesting point. I bumped up the Provari to 4.6 volts. That's 3.29 amps, and 15.1 watts. The Provari still fires. At 4.7 volts, it won't fire. Being that close to the limit, the Provari might just not be able to provide power as efficiently, as you said. I clean the contacts regularly with 91% iso alcohol.
I just wonder if it is the function of the battery. Should probably use the same battery in each device...or is there an integrated battery in the ZNA?
Both devices are run from the same batch of 4 AW IMR 18490 batteries, charged and rotated in use. I just switched out both to test on fresh batteries. Same result.
It's not a problem. I'm just happy to be able to use the Veritas on the Provari. I was curious about the difference between them.
I just tested both on fresh batteries. Both are running at 4.3 volts. (3.07 amps, 13.2 watts). Waited for the Veritas to cool, to remove cap or coil warmth as a factor. Same length of firing and draw. Same level of air on inhale, pulling on the draw.
The result is that the Provari takes longer for the vapor to get warm, and it's a lesser amount of vapor. The ZNA warms up faster and produces more vapor.
Could be voltage drop on the devices. Now I need to drink water and stop test vaping for a while.
