... does this mean that I can start responding to all questions in the New Members Forum by saying: "Just get a Provari"? LOL.
But it seems to have been pretty good advice. I've been vaping on it for a few hours, playing with the voltage power settings a little bit, testing the Ohm resistance, and this thing, so far, is everything everyone says it is. Compared to the Ego starter kit and the non-regulated Provape-1, it's simply a better way to vape. It just is.
Though part of me feels a little bit bourgeois and extravagant for blowing so much $$$ (I'm just a poor hippie living month to month), it occurs to me that if I have the Provari, the Provape-1 for backup, and now start saving my money for a ZAP or a ZAU (or both), I'm basically set for life. Once set up one can have a smooth and consistent vape for pennies per month... Having a few very well-made items instead of a drawer full of random pieces of various vaping materials seems to be the most sensible way to go about this, at least for me, both in terms of quality and long-term cost efficiency.
I really like the weight, the feel of it in my hand, the button placement and action, the simplicity of the menus, and the obvious quality of the build. The only possible issue I could see for people with this design is: If your vaping style is to push the button multiple times for one vape this could be problematic, because you might fool the Provari into thinking you're looking for menu options when you're not. But this isn't an issue for me, especially since the draw, per set voltage, is so absolutely consistent that you can know exactly what you're going to get each time you press the button.
The Provari is an engineering masterpiece, a work of art. It really is.
But it seems to have been pretty good advice. I've been vaping on it for a few hours, playing with the voltage power settings a little bit, testing the Ohm resistance, and this thing, so far, is everything everyone says it is. Compared to the Ego starter kit and the non-regulated Provape-1, it's simply a better way to vape. It just is.
Though part of me feels a little bit bourgeois and extravagant for blowing so much $$$ (I'm just a poor hippie living month to month), it occurs to me that if I have the Provari, the Provape-1 for backup, and now start saving my money for a ZAP or a ZAU (or both), I'm basically set for life. Once set up one can have a smooth and consistent vape for pennies per month... Having a few very well-made items instead of a drawer full of random pieces of various vaping materials seems to be the most sensible way to go about this, at least for me, both in terms of quality and long-term cost efficiency.
I really like the weight, the feel of it in my hand, the button placement and action, the simplicity of the menus, and the obvious quality of the build. The only possible issue I could see for people with this design is: If your vaping style is to push the button multiple times for one vape this could be problematic, because you might fool the Provari into thinking you're looking for menu options when you're not. But this isn't an issue for me, especially since the draw, per set voltage, is so absolutely consistent that you can know exactly what you're going to get each time you press the button.
The Provari is an engineering masterpiece, a work of art. It really is.