KK is known for disassembling stuff because her curiosity gets the better of herself.Disassemble what ? It is a Reos. Just slide the door off and you have full access....
KK is known for disassembling stuff because her curiosity gets the better of herself.Disassemble what ? It is a Reos. Just slide the door off and you have full access....
The stuff that is left over after you take something apart and put it back together is what my Dad would call "profits".LOLLLLLLLLL. I had a feeling that was going to come up. For shame for shame. I have to laugh though. Okay, I'm obsessive. I admit it. I could be one of those on the opposite end of the spectrum, but I'm not. When I was young we didn't have much. So when I got something, I took care of it. My brother on the other hand, broke his stuff less than a week after he got it. So I was obsessive about my stuff. I guess it is a carry over from that. He used to love to take clocks apart, like Baby Ben wind up clocks. Only thing is, he could NEVER get them back together. I was always afraid of taking something apart. But when I started fly fishing, and using old classic reels, I had to learn. So you can say that is what brought this on. So at least I can laugh with you. Give me a little credit please.
been reading quite a few posts about .2 and lower ohm coil sets.... so I decided to try one to see what all the hubub is about...
made a dual paralell 28 gauge coming in at .18 ohms.... heats up instantly and is harsh as all ell .... I dont see the enjoyment the others are finding in < .3 ohms.... unless one really likes extra hot vape and harsh taste... but hey some people like Abitas Wrought Iron IPA too.. ( tastes like Pine-Sol)
Good information.When you go that low in resistance, wicking becomes even more essential than it normally does. I always build larger diameter coils the lower in resistance I go, because it is able to wick juice much more quickly. The cross-sectional area of a circle increases with the square of its radius, so even going from 2 mm coil to a 2.5 mm coil gives you 56% more cross-sectional area.
Also, 28 gauge wire is just too thin for such a low resistance build -- it simply heats up way too fast for even the best wick to keep up. Thicker wire will heat up more slowly, and have much more surface area touching the wick because of the increased number of wraps needed to reach the same resistance. It will still heat up plenty fast as long as you don't use something ridiculously thick like 20 gauge wire (although of course, some people prefer it that way). I've built < 0.2 ohm coils that were still just relatively "warm" vapes.
I tend to stay in the 0.6 - 0.8 ohm range, because the super low-resistance builds just burn through juice too fast to be worth it (sure, you get crazy clouds of vapor, but not an equivalent increase of flavor). But every so often its a lot of fun.
since all I had was 28 ga.........
Ya shoulda said something , I've got 26ga if you need it .since all I had was 28 ga.........
Beats me Killer.what does anyone know about the IPV 4?? I cant find much at all on performance, issues etc.... altho I did find alot of sites with pre order status for it.... guess it really hasnt hit the market yet....
any previews by Todd or PB to be considered?
went and did it.... got the IPV 4 from a local B&M for 95$ will give more info after I play with it for a while...
I first took painters tape and made a border around just the display area on the outside of mirror cover. I then took my atty off, turned it off, and removed batteries. I slightly opened the case enough to remove mirror panel (allen wrench). Holding the mirror strip up to a light source I could see the squared off area i needed to polish off. I then took more tape and squared off the INSIDE area that i would polish. I used my McGuires headlight restore kit products to do the job. I used first 1000 and then 3000 grit paper and their polishing liquid to gently remove just the mirror area over the display screen. After removing all tape and using windex to clean it up i put it back on and tighened up the case.