So just a random update in the name of science:
I have been running multiple test rigs over the past several weeks. All have been consistent in the .4-.5ohm range.
This button was run on an orangutan fuse block with factory SS firing pin
This button was run on an orangutan fuse block with SS pin coated in brass shim
This is a beta-test PTFE button run on an orangutan fuse block, custom brass dibby pin, and de-chromed 510 pin
It seems odd, but it makes sense as well.
With the SS pin, resist is higher, but the electricity flow is consistant, the heat seems to dissipate through the fuse block which is the path of least resist.
The SS pin shimmed w/ brass (top side) reduced resist drastically, but with the electricity flowing through the thin shim as the path of least resist, while having the SS "reflecting" heat upwards, we see a severely deformed button.
With all mods, full brass dibby pin, dechromed 510 pin, and orangutan fuse block, the overall resist of the mod was bare minimum. Running w/ the ptfe button, no issues at all.
I just switched the PTFE button to the brass shimmed SS PIN mod, and installed a new stock button on the fully modded rig.
Will report back in a few days.
Current hypothesis is that even with the fuse block, the thin brass shim demands the heaviest energy flow, thus heating quickly using the lower SS pin as a "heat shield" forcing the temp of the shim to rise faster than the button can handle.
I am guessing that the fully modded rig, having no bottlenecks or expressways, will have even heat dispursion leaving the stock button intact.
(Does this all make sense?)
Sent from the zoo using Tapatypo 2