Hi to all:
I'm still very much new to the world of vaping. I tried to cut back on my analogs earlier this year with a Joye 510 starter kit, but my experiment with vaping only helped for a few weeks before I went back to being a full-time analog smoker.
There seemed to be two huge roadblocks keeping me from beginning to vape full-time and try to really kick those analogs forever: SATISFACTION and SIMPLICITY.
SATISFACTION: Honestly, the Joye 510 starter just didn't "cut it" for me. As a smoker I "hit" on a cigarette for only 1 second whereas the Joye I had to literally drag on it for 10+ seconds to get the same vape cloud. Just like the old song: "I can't get no satisfaction." I looked very carefully on the E-Cig forums and ran across this wonderful thread to try to approach this problem. I really want a vape that can totally replace analogs, and I need something I could hit for only 1-2 seconds and give me total satisfaction. Problem was...something that confronts all new vapers...complexity and an overabundance of choices leading to the goal of...
SIMPLICITY: I admit I don't know jack about Ohms, Volts, and Watts. It overwhelms me! But my research on the thread linked above says I should try a Smok Tech dual-coil cartomizer with either a Darwin, Provari, or some other big battery like a Riva? But....geez...how do I pick the right ohms and volts for this new setup? It looks like 1.5 ohms dual-coil with a 5v battery is the best ratio to use...but I'm shooting in the dark here.
Am I going in the right direction with those numbers? Any reason for 2+ ohms and higher voltage? Or why should we do variable volts?
It is wonderful how people try their best to be very helpful to newbies on the E-Cig forums, yet I'd be willing to bet money that it's extremely intimidating to most smokers trying to vape because analogs are simple to buy over the counter and they don't require an electrical engineering degree for smoking satisfaction
Thanks for reading this. Anyone with more knowledge than I have in this area...feel free to post any suggestions you like. Thanks.
REFERENCED THREAD ABOVE (repeated): http://www.e-cigarette-forum.com/forum/cartomizer-reviews/177866-smoktech-dual-coil-cartomizers.html
I'm still very much new to the world of vaping. I tried to cut back on my analogs earlier this year with a Joye 510 starter kit, but my experiment with vaping only helped for a few weeks before I went back to being a full-time analog smoker.
There seemed to be two huge roadblocks keeping me from beginning to vape full-time and try to really kick those analogs forever: SATISFACTION and SIMPLICITY.
SATISFACTION: Honestly, the Joye 510 starter just didn't "cut it" for me. As a smoker I "hit" on a cigarette for only 1 second whereas the Joye I had to literally drag on it for 10+ seconds to get the same vape cloud. Just like the old song: "I can't get no satisfaction." I looked very carefully on the E-Cig forums and ran across this wonderful thread to try to approach this problem. I really want a vape that can totally replace analogs, and I need something I could hit for only 1-2 seconds and give me total satisfaction. Problem was...something that confronts all new vapers...complexity and an overabundance of choices leading to the goal of...
SIMPLICITY: I admit I don't know jack about Ohms, Volts, and Watts. It overwhelms me! But my research on the thread linked above says I should try a Smok Tech dual-coil cartomizer with either a Darwin, Provari, or some other big battery like a Riva? But....geez...how do I pick the right ohms and volts for this new setup? It looks like 1.5 ohms dual-coil with a 5v battery is the best ratio to use...but I'm shooting in the dark here.
Am I going in the right direction with those numbers? Any reason for 2+ ohms and higher voltage? Or why should we do variable volts?

It is wonderful how people try their best to be very helpful to newbies on the E-Cig forums, yet I'd be willing to bet money that it's extremely intimidating to most smokers trying to vape because analogs are simple to buy over the counter and they don't require an electrical engineering degree for smoking satisfaction
Thanks for reading this. Anyone with more knowledge than I have in this area...feel free to post any suggestions you like. Thanks.
REFERENCED THREAD ABOVE (repeated): http://www.e-cigarette-forum.com/forum/cartomizer-reviews/177866-smoktech-dual-coil-cartomizers.html