Makes perfect sense to me.About this water testing. If the coil only gets to 100℃ when heating water, wouldn't that mean that if the coil gets to 220℃ (for example) when vaping then the eliquid is also heated to 220℃? Or am I missing something?
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Oh the womper room, I have seen that thread but never knew. ThanksBeen around for awhile, though I doubt it exists outside this board. A few of us noticed we didn't quite belong in either the tootlepuffer or cloud chaser group, so we made our ownMid range wattage, usually accompanied by somewhat higher nic, and for some of us less liquid consumption. Not that it really matter
but there's a thread out there if you'd like to chat it up.
About this water testing. If the coil only gets to 100℃ when heating water, wouldn't that mean that if the coil gets to 220℃ (for example) when vaping then the eliquid is also heated to 220℃? Or am I missing something?
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path of least resistance.... While water can conduct electricity its not the path of least resistance so it won't just hop around the coil through the waterIt just seems like water would short the coils?????
My question still stands, though. How do you know, for certain, that the coil is only at 100C and not at 130C or somewhere else above the 100C needed to produce boiling? The heat sink effect of the water reaching boiling point will require a higher coil temperature. Just how much higher is a question that needs an answer and is probably loaded with variables like wire size and coil size to think of just a couple.
you had all night!I'll have to run some experiments and see what it looks like.
Thank you.The measurement for heat is energy. Temperature is proportional to the average kinetic energy of the particles in a system. The force dominating molecular and intermolecular dynamics is the electromagnetic.
As we know the vapor we inhale is an aerosol, liquid suspended in gas. Most of the gas is air. Some of the gas consists of molecules created during the process and other molecules released from the eliquid during the process. Released chemicals that still might be gas when inhaling are predomindently water, but I'm ignorant when it comes to flavorings here. I'm very doubtful any VG or PG gets to our mouths as gas. So, how about those tiny suspended liquid particles? Some of those are ejected from the coil-wick as liquid. They join the colloid at a lower temperatures. Some molecules, mostly carrier liquid, do briefly turn to gas. Rapidly expanding gases provide the mechanism for ejecting the liquid particles. These gas molecules condense by cooling a bit, then bumping into each other and the suspended liquid particles.
Edit for an additional thought: For the most part, the molecules turned to gas will be forced to move back into the wick. This will provide rapid cooling as well as a confined space. Both of which may reduce or eliminate the conditions needed for pyrolytic reactions.
Thank you.
I'm not clear on the difference between the liquid as the original molecules more spread out and gas. Most of the examples of evaporation I read about involved water which is a very very tough material meaning hard to degrade. When water evaporates there's no chemistry, just mechanical forces, right? Presumably we can evaporate e liquid at low enough temperatures so there is little or no chemical changes? Otherwise the bad stuff would show up under all conditions.
Edit, so you are saying the gas is mostly air. okay
If you have not changed the tcr on the Pico before it is set to 120. Turn your device off. Push the fire button and the + button (same time) for 5 or so seconds and it will pop up for you to adjust. I would do the cotton burn test, but 120 tcr is off. It should be more like 98-100.Standard for M1 is .00092, from what I read. I haven't changed it. I just chose M1 and vaped.
luckily I only vape at 15 watts, I don't even need to worry lol
The temperature is also dependent on your wire type. I generally vape around 6-10W with a 1.8ohm 30AWG Kanthal A1. With a fresh battery in my mech squonker even at this low wattage the coil temp was above 470 degrees!
Thinner wires get hotter faster! different wire types heat up at different rates. It's not just about the power level applied.
luckily I only vape at 15 watts, I don't even need to worry lol