So I've been building my own coils for a few weeks now and decided to start using 28 gauge kanthal wire. My first coil read 0.6 ohms. I wanted to get around 0.8. Is this safe? What's the lowest you can go in a mechanical? Thank you all
0.6 is perfectly fine. i tend to try to stay at 0.5 or above, but i've heard of people going as low as 0.3 (although i can't say that i've tried it, or that i'd recommend it...).
EDIT: make sure the batteries you're using are safe, though, ie, aw or efest imr's, panny hybrid, etc. do NOT try this unless you know the battery is safe as well.
Thank you for the info. I feel better now. I'm using imr efest batteries
vapo jam:9878919 said:
0.6 is perfectly fine. i tend to try to stay at 0.5 or above, but i've heard of people going as low as 0.3 (although i can't say that i've tried it, or that i'd recommend it...).
EDIT: make sure the batteries you're using are safe, though, ie, aw or efest imr's, panny hybrid, etc. do NOT try this unless you know the battery is safe as well.
So I've been building my own coils for a few weeks now and decided to start using 28 gauge kanthal wire. My first coil read 0.6 ohms. I wanted to get around 0.8. Is this safe? What's the lowest you can go in a mechanical? Thank you all
It is only safe if the cells used can handle the discharge rate.
Find out what the discharge rate of your cells are (AW IMR ~ 15C) and then use ohms law and find out if your set up is safe.
Don't play around, you're holding a potential pipe bomb to your lips.
I don't personally approve of ultra low resistance coils, especially someone new to RBA's. I strongly recommend that you look over my article on RBA's in my blog. Click the link below my avatar to reach the blog. There is a large collection of resource materials that should be considered required reading for any new RBA user.
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