I take a needle and roll it across the mesh like you would scissors to ribbon to get it to curl up; this makes rolling the wick easier and keeps it uniform throughout the process. Once the wick is pretty tight, I place the wick in a pair of pliers or a metal clip and drop about 5-8 drops of PG on the wick and let it absorb.
Once the PG is absorbed by the wick, I take a Bic lighter and light one end of it. It'll catch fire, burn off the PG and help the oxidation. I'll repeat this 2-3 more times, maybe 4-5 depending on how thick the wick is.
Once the wick cools down from the burning/oxidation process, I'll wrap the coil directly on the wick. You just need to keep in mind, you are wrapping metal on metal, so until it's oxidized, it can and probably will short if you fire too long. You only want to pulse it for 1-2 seconds; enough to see where the coils are lighting up the most.
Generally, at first, the top and bottom coils are going to light up and that's referred to as a hot spot, which is what we need to work out. To work out the hot spots, you adjust the coils that aren't lighting up. Make sure they're not too close / touching each other, make sure they are actually touching the wick and then continue to pulse.'
You don't want to actually fire the coils as much as you would to vape until you have all of the coils lighting up evenly. Anything less and the potential for a short will still be there.
So this method you're talking about you light the mesh after it's rolled? Sorry mesh is all new to me...well all this is honestly. I build coils and attys all the time but really want to get the steam turbine down. I torched the mesh before and after I rolled it. Think maybe I didn't torch it enough?? Thanks for the response
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