im not sure what the board is doing as far as working in cold climates but i have been enjoying my orchid with triple twisted 30 gauge coil tp @440 .09 ohm 23 watts until today its 23 degrees out and had to go to town my dna 40 was in my coat pocket like 5 minutes i started to take a hit and could tell right away i was going to get a burnt hit so i stopped looked at it and now it was .29 ohms and fluctuated between .23 and .29 i had to turn watts down to 13.5 and tp to 390 to vape it out in the cold. this is opposite of what id think it should do anyways i started thinking maybe my coil loosened up because of the big swing in resistance but after letting it sit at home it reset back to my original .09 and its vaping normal again watts back at 23 tp@ 440. just wanted to share my experience as it was just like others have reported. dont know if this is a bad design or just the way it was designed to work. as it is its not an out and about devise but works great indoors.
It's definitely not designed that way. I've had mine inside and outside with no problems. Granted not THAT cold, the coldest was probably 32-34 degrees, but it functioned flawlessly when I did. In fact, just last night I don't know what the exact temp was, but I know it was darn cold, I had it sitting on a piece of scaffolding for at least 30 minutes before I picked it back up and took a hit... Prior to that it was sitting in my 72 degree house and I hit it right as I walked out the door. In both cases it worked perfectly with no change in the vape. So I dunno... However... I'm going to take a WILD guess here... If it's NOT an actual problem with the board, then here's the only think I can think of....
If you have a poor connection... In normal room temperature it's an "ok" connection... So the resistance reads just fine....
You take it outside.... it's cold... the metal in the atty and coil contract slightly.... So that "ok" connection becomes a "bad" connection... So now it re-reads the resistance when it fires... But now it reads it much higher than it really is... As soon as you hit it, the coil/atty warm up and the connection becomes "good" again... but now the base resistance is already set... So it continues to think it's still the really high value... So in firing it's going to fire with all she's got to try to bring the temp up, but it's never going to be able to get it that high...
You walk inside.... The atty/coil/board all warm back up and it's set a while... You fire it and now it re-reads the base resistance again... This time it sees it back to normal because the "ok" connection is still good at these temps...
Just a guess....