you know bad youre doing nothing but giving me the urge to throw an icr in a mech and short it. Would make a sweet informative youtube video right? Its all about education, has nothing to do with how awesome it is to blow %^#$ up!!!If one of those went off in your pocket i could imagine losing a leg
I might have been a skeptic like you had I not had a protected battery vent violently in one of my mechanical mods some time back. The incident scared the crap out of me. You didn't hear of MY incident at that time, did you? It wasn't reported because the incident happened at my place of work and I didn't want anyone else to know about it. Luckily it only caused minimal damage to my clothing and ruined my mod, but it could have been much worse.If batteries are so dangerous then why with probably hundreds of thousands of mod users worldwide vaping for several years is there only one reported case of injury on the Internet, an American gentleman in Florida a couple of years ago?
crxess:10570224 said:Been scolded for what I post.
Okay, my bad.
This is after the General section not the New members section.
Thread title is not Directed to New Vapers
In Fact thread title reads - ALERT: Mod Batteries from FastTech and Ebay
Now this had a bit to do with my responses. Thread title is misleading and Not to the core of the post.
Fasttech Does a crappy job of Not warning anyone about any type of risk on any of the Products they sell. Then again many many US venders take the same hard line(blind Eye)
That said - Fasttech Does sell some Quality Real brand Batteries. Panisonic CGR's I purchased are identical to the ones from my US supplier and perfrom identical.
Ebay - That place has turned into a shills heaven and I feel sorry for any uninformed person shopping there. I have seen Bait and Switch, Repackaged fake, used sold as New unpackaged and pricing 10,000% over normal value. No typo, 10,000% Thieves abound!
There are also a few Honest everyday people still on ebay offering Quality products at reasonable prices.
I have gotten AW's from these as well as Efest.
so, if we are going to have a Battery Safety Thread why don't we get this thing closed and post in a proper fashion.
Appropriate thread title
Quality Battery list
Manufacturers list
Battery Data
Recommendations for PROPER use
Warnings for likelihood of getting a defect Even from A reputable Brand
Same info for untrusted Batteries
Brands
Types
likelihood of failure under what circumstances
OR
Just link them to
http://www.e-cigarette-forum.com/fo...9007-warning-rechargeable-batteries-apvs.html
And
http://www.e-cigarette-forum.com/fo...9007-warning-rechargeable-batteries-apvs.html
Since a ton of work has been done to gather information.
A few months back we had a section on Batteries on the main forums list. Wonder where it went?
Being that I am a veteran member, I am not able to start a post in the New Members section. It is the format of this website and not of my choosing.Been scolded for what I post. Okay, my bad. This is after the General section not the New members section. Thread title is not Directed to New Vapers
What are you talking about? The core of the post is about one of our novice members unknowingly ordering and receiving inappropriate and possibly dangerous batteries for her first mechanical mod. The novice assumed that since the battery was suggested in a drop down menu for that mod, that it was the appropriate battery for it. The vendor was FastTech, and since the current rage on this forum is to find the cheapest gear at FastTech it was relevant to name them as the vendor. I did not single that vendor out, but also cautioned potential customers to be wary of EBay and any other online vendor for that matter, too. I'm confused how can you see this as misleading?In Fact thread title reads - ALERT: Mod Batteries from FastTech and Ebay
Now this had a bit to do with my responses. Thread title is misleading and Not to the core of the post.
If you will go to and review my original post in this thread, you will see that I link to a blog post that I wrote on Battery Basics for Mods: IMR or Protected? http://www.e-cigarette-forum.com/forum/blogs/baditude/4848-9-battery-basics-mods-imr-protected.html Did you miss the link?so, if we are going to have a Battery Safety Thread why don't we get this thing closed and post in a proper fashion.
Appropriate thread title
Quality Battery list
Manufacturers list
Battery Data
Recommendations for PROPER use
Warnings for likelihood of getting a defect Even from A reputable Brand
Same info for untrusted Batteries
Brands
Types
likelihood of failure under what circumstances
OR
Just link them to
http://www.e-cigarette-forum.com/fo...9007-warning-rechargeable-batteries-apvs.html
And
http://www.e-cigarette-forum.com/fo...9007-warning-rechargeable-batteries-apvs.html
Since a ton of work has been done to gather information.
Those lost battery safety stickies are way down at the bottom of the page where the Suppliers Forums are. A lot of good they do way down there.A few months back we had a section on Batteries on the main forums list. Wonder where it went?
Sorry for the outburst. I'm old, tired, and over worked, too. It doesn't help that I just lost my job last week, too. So be understanding of my response, as I will of yours.Just wondering if you put together a good Warning post if the Mods or Admin wouldn't place it in the New members section for you. After all, they move post daily.
Take care and relax. I'm way to old, tired and over worked to even wish I did everything you do.![]()
Application - Application - Application
First thing I noticed when trying to follow the Initial post was contradiction via links.
Discussion of a specific battery with a Known possible Danger if used in an improper application. Then a link to a Discontinued product formarly sold by DV which had ICR batteries.
The Particular Battery may or may not be JUNK, as I have none I cannot specify. However many ICR batteries work well in APV applications and are the most widely supplied type in APV kits. (The no name Blue Batteries)
Smoktech also sells a very well performing ICR in a 500mah which I personally use with a Kick(Protection) @ 7-8w
Do I recommend any of these Batteries - No - not that you should or should not use one. You must gather Facts and make wise decisions. I generally recommend Hybrid Batteries due to less likely explosive results. However it is the total package that must be considered. Application!
Even the most trusted AW IMR can wreak Havoc if improperly used.
(2) recent incidents.
1 - User fell asleep and pinched device between body and bedding causing continuous firing and super heating.
2 - User placed Unlocked in pocket and unit started firing until super heated and panic indued. Minor burns to fingers.
Application - Using the correct power supply in the correct device under the proper conditions to maximize safety and minimize chances of a mishap or injury.
Would I order a box full of unknown batteries from China - Not on your life.
I would be interested in finding a resource to that information. I received a PM just today about those Panny's not being as safe as being touted, but I am not at freedom to discuss it. The hybrids have been very confusing for me to understand their makeup, as I've not found sources that describe them, so I have been reluctant to recommend them to others. Do you have a link or resource?.. they don't even realize that the hybrid batteries that are currently the best on the market are NOT manganese batteries at all and have a very combustible chemistry.
Sorry for the outburst. I'm old, tired, and over worked, too. It doesn't help that I just lost my job last week, too. So be understanding of my response, as I will of yours.
I've contacted a couple of the mods here about a making some of my blogs a sticky. They told me that was not under their control, only Old Soldier, our Forum Administrator holds that power. As I said, I've attempted to contact him before and he ignored me.
Please don't buy cheap batteries. Buy the best batteries you can afford, and if you can't afford to buy safe batteries then you can't afford to vape.
Somebody needs to point out that buying batteries from a company that specialises in clones and counterfeits is, as a matter of logic, not a great idea. Sorry but it had to be said.
The biggest danger in batteries is counterfeiting. After that comes not telling you what the battery type is on the product page, and then selling it with a crazy and impossible capacity rating like 1200mAh for a tiny cheap battery.
The Ultrafire batts on the page linked to are plain, unprotected Li-ion cells and with a ridiculously high capacity rating. They may well be genuine but any *fire battery is just one grade above unlabelled cheapos.
These are the type you don't use in an APV and especially YOU MUST NOT STACK THEM. This is how people get an explosion in their face - using two cells of this type, in series, in a sealed metal tubemod, is a great way to get a week in intensive care at your local hospital. If a battery fails and/or the charger is faulty and/or there is a fault on the APV and/or there is user error (like inserting the batteries in reverse) then it is possible to get a chain failure event and occasionally this has resulted in an explosion. This is always right in front of the face and typically on the first use of freshly-charged cells.
DON'T USE CHEAP BATTERIES - THE COST COULD BE MORE THAN YOU BARGAINED FOR.
The reason why people advise the use of AW batteries is not just because they are good quality but also because if you buy from an authorised distributor then you should get a genuine product, not a counterfeit. Counterfeit batteries are highly dangerous.
The ideal batteries to use in modern devices are IMR (Li-Mn) or Panasonic-type hybrid cells. If you need two stacked cells for a plain 6v APV then the type to use is Li-Po 3v cells (Li-FePo4), which are generally recognised as the safest of all. They have some practical drawbacks though, which are that they are 3.3v cells (lower voltage than usual), they need a special charger, and above all you have to be absolutely certain they are not counterfeit (because if they are, they could be plain vanilla Li-ion cells of the lowest possible quality, that is to say the worst possible choice to stack in a metal tubemod). Genuine Tenergy Li-Po's are OK for stacking except they are heavily counterfeited.
One of the biggest problems we have in the ecig world is counterfeiting. This means clones made to exactly resemble the original, down to false labels or markings and serial numbers that make the item appear genuine. Fakes are dangerous when the product is something used directly in front of the face, draws a very high current (electrical load) for the size of the device, depends critically on genuine parts of high quality for its safety, involves the use of batteries that could be counterfeit, involves the use of diabolically poor design of equipment with no gas venting, is sold by overseas vendors known for shortcuts / faking and being outside the law, and has a history of putting people in hospital due to user errors combined with fakes / bad design / material failures. So you can see that this is a bad area to take chances in order to save a couple of bucks.
We made a decision on ECF that no vendor would be banned for selling dangerous rubbish, because they could simply sell their trash elsewhere, so there was no point. However it means we have a duty to inform people of the issues.
People need to be informed that buying sealed metal tubemods or unprotected Li-ion cells are intrinsically dangerous actions and can never be called safe whatever anyone says about it. Using the two together is elevating the risk to unacceptable levels. Using stacked fake/unprotected Li-ion cells in a sealed metal device is lunacy and there is no other way to describe it. In the flashlight world, where they have huge numbers of units out there (many more than we have of the same sort of device), one of the experts on the Candlepower forum estimated they have 1 in 3,000 units explode when used in dangerous mode: stacked unprotected Li-ion cells in a sealed metal tube (which is what a flashlight is). The difference is theirs go bang in a hand or a pocket (read the links on our battery page). Ours explode in the face. Ecigs have much higher risk than flashlights because they are used inserted into the mouth - if something goes wrong then that will be the worst $20 you ever saved. Speak to the guy who advised his friend what APV to buy, then had to visit him in the intensive care unit where the wrong batteries in the wrong APV had put him. Three days in a coma, intubated, after a series of operations to remove metal shrapnel from the back of his throat after the explosion, to fix facial damage, to remove broken teeth, to fix a damaged jaw, and a series of eye operations to remove shrapnel to look forward to. Maybe then you will figure out that saving a few bucks on batteries and a clone/counterfeit device with lousy design in the first place might not be good for your health. It's your decision.
You may be OK with the risk, if you consider your face and eyesight to be disposable - but the publicity when it blows up is not too good for vaping. If it were possible to keep the problem to yourself alone, you could justifiably say it's nobody else's business; but when the global media pick up on it (as they do now they know there's a good story there), it's no longer just your business and nobody else's. In one of these incidents the Police, Fire Department, and local hospital were all involved (as they will be) and all wrote reports which were leaked to the media. The result is that 'ecigs are dangerous'.
No they aren't. People who buy cheap batteries and sealed metal tubemods from firms specialising in fakes who don't have a clue what they are selling and don't care anyway and only want to make a fast buck no matter the cost to anyone else and are located in China so they can't be held accountable at law are dangerous.
This problem had mostly been fixed by US vendors because of the huge lawsuits hanging over those who thought there was no problem. In other words, they became sensible, when they saw what the alternative was: bankruptcy and jail. That doesn't apply to China vendors as they can sell highly dangerous materials without any fear of redress. Some of them clearly don't have a clue what they are doing and don't care anyway.
There are good reasons why you should support local vendors. One of them is that you probably place some value on your face.