I don't really believe in this logic. Initially that may be the case at first thought but once someone learns how to quit properly and switch to vaping, I find the strength of the nic has more to do with the TH, especially if they straight lung hit. I was a somewhat heavy smoker bitd but I could never do over 18mg because it was just too harsh on the throat with the devices I was using. New Vapor's should not be vaping only when they get a nic urge at a 24mg if it is too harsh for them. They should be vaping all the time throughout the day at a comfortable level of a TH for their tastes. This settles those urges instead of getting spikes.
Not sure what to say about that except it's a time proven method and why bottlers bottle the strengths that they do. Nobody said vapers should only be vaping at 24mg. But if a vaper discovers that vaping 1 mil of 24mg or 18mg or 11mg throughout a day of scheduled smokebreaks keeps them from cigarettes, why discourage that in favor of chainvaping 10 mils of 2.4mg?
Lung inhaling is not a smoker behavior. I've never met a smoker who 'lung inhaled' cigarettes. Smokers I know are used to a smoking style that is scheduled - in time and in amount. And I don't think that nicotine gets processed any differently in lower lung tissue than upper lung tissue. Recommending all-day deep-lung inhaling to smokers with compromised lung function is not something I would do.
the quality nicotine of today is so highly refined it has little to no taste and pretty much zero throat hit at 3mg/ml. For the most part, TH at 3-6mg is a result of heat, PG and additives.