First, is this a single cell mod or a dual? 80W on a single cell mod is pushing hard on the usable boundary of single cell mods, anything over 50W I throw on a dual. Have you tried this atty on a dual mod to see if it does the same thing. I've had RTAs & RDAs that have retained excessive heat and that heat will transfer down to the mods case.Hmmm... My concern is about unnecessarilily taxing my hardware to achieve the vape I want. I built a 316L coil at 0.18 which ran beautifully at 80w, but if I took more than a few pulls on it, the whole thing would heat up, battery and all. It had me a little worried I was pushing things a little too hard. My thinking is that the closer the set wattage on a mod is to the wattage generated by a coil on bypass, the less taxing on the chip. If I eliminate that factor, I can determine if my build pushes the battery too hard, or if that's just too much heat at the atty being transferred through the mod.
Sent from my XT1765 using Tapatalk
There are a lot of inefficient mod chipsets out there that will generate heat as well. My old Cuboid would get quite warm at 120W, but if you popped the batteries out they would be cooler than the mods case.