jigtg,
A good thread I read long ago and just reread it (all 9 pages, 5 min?), suscribed to it too. Thanks for the link.
As I stated before, feel free to post links here to associated threads.
It has a lot of good info, suggestions, concerns and ideas.
I searched for a long time and still do for a source of a 1mm ceramic rod or pyrex glass.
The wick as it is now goes under the mesh to soak it as the mesh fills around the cup.
Wet particles, if formed, are more likely to be heavier and will cling to the cart inside before getting out the hole. Most have many turns to make and the vapor is very heavy with moisture from PG, VG and humidity from the air. The filter is, to me a great idea, and a "disk" of Pyramid Tea Bag(Lipton) at the cart exit hole is an excellent safety feature.
As you can see in the pics, the 402 has huge feed holes. With a ceramic core, this is needed for more liquid feed since there is no wet atty core. It provides a hot surface for the mist to hit and vaporize. Most ceramics , even porus, are usually to slow to feed for what we consider normal vaping. The feed holes of most ceramic cups will be to small and need to be enlarged which can be difficult even with a dremel tool. Not impossible though. A thinner eliquid would help this more than likely too and is easy to do.
I've built many a prototype coils, wickless, and although they worked, vapor production was low. I haven't had the time to explore all the possibilities yet. Poor feed on a wicked coil is lame in vapor production too. That is why you will see the one end of the wick under the mesh when you disassemble most. As long as the cart is feeding the bridge, the wick is being fed too.
Thanks for the link.
For those new to the forum or just don't know, when reading a thread of interest you can go to the top and click Thread tools, Suscribe to this thread and select instant email notification. Everytime a new post is submitted you get an email with a clickable link to it. It keeps from searching the ones of interest and hunting them down to see if new posts are there when they get moved down in the list. A huge time saver.