Actually I think you're probably only sub-ohming on each draw for the few milliseconds (or whatever) while the nickel heats up and the resistance immediately follows. Unless maybe if you've built a really short or extra-low gauge coil, or some combination thereof.
Yep and now I wonder if we'll need new meters LOL.
I know right!? But they sure are nice looking.
How is it for a left hander? I mean I'm ambidextrous but I tend to vape lefty.
Does anyone know if you need to torch the nickel like we did with the kanthal?
Man they are proud of those things at $299.00 a throw,,,
I'm wondering both about possible performance issues or health risks from heating ni200 red hot. To those who have been using ni200 coils, have you found any issue with dry burning them in order to clean off gunk? Has there been any warning from evolv to not dry burn ni200 wire?
Oh, and speaking of the DNA 40s and the temperature control study, the crowd-funding thread concerning the study updated this morning. See update 2.
https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/e-cigarette-research-temperature-of-evaporation#home
It's recommended not to. That's safest. They recommend cleaning with a surfactant like simple green but now that I think of it, I wonder if that just meant prior to use?
I'm finding that it's actually not a good idea to dry burn ANY coil.
It's recommended not to. That's safest. They recommend cleaning with a surfactant like simple green but now that I think of it, I wonder if that just meant prior to use?
I'm finding that it's actually not a good idea to dry burn ANY coil.
Reddit post claims the will ship tomorrow and have plenty of stock. You could call and ask them. http://www.reddit.com/r/electronic_.../got_off_the_phone_with_vapedojocom_they_are/
I just ordered a protovapor xpv with DNA 40.....
(sent from Mars, it's not as red as I imagined.)
I vape extracted tobaccos which gunk things up, so my option is dry burn or build a new coil daily. I'm hoping that even if it's recommended to not dry burn ni200, doing so doesn't pose a greater risk than dry burning Kanthal, which I already do knowing there may be a small, though unknowable, risk to that practice. Anybody know of info saying it may be MORE dangerous to dry burn ni200 than Kanthal and why?It's recommended not to. That's safest. They recommend cleaning with a surfactant like simple green but now that I think of it, I wonder if that just meant prior to use?
I'm finding that it's actually not a good idea to dry burn ANY coil.
Why is that? I have to admit, I dry burn my coil every time I change my wick.
I vape extracted tobaccos which gunk things up, so my option is dry burn or build a new coil daily. I'm hoping that even if it's recommended to not dry burn ni200, doing so doesn't pose a greater risk than dry burning Kanthal, which I already do knowing there may be a small, though unknowable, risk to that practice. Anybody know of info saying it may be MORE dangerous to dry burn ni200 than Kanthal and why?
Even better of course will be a way discovered to clean off carbon buildup without dry burning. Until that happens, it's kind of important for me to be able to dry burn without TOO much risk.
Even better of course will be a way discovered to clean off carbon buildup without dry burning. Until that happens, it's kind of important for me to be able to dry burn without TOO much risk.
Metal oxidation, fatigue and/or pitting. Basically leads to the potential for particulates in the vapor, which is bad.
I can understand that but if you can taste metal like with kanthal without torching it first then I would think you are getting a lot more metal than torching it first and not tasting it. Make sense? If you can taste it then it has to be a fairly high ppm wouldn't you think?