snork

Vaping Master
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May 30, 2011
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PXL_20220907_232511795_2.jpgPXL_20220907_235311317.jpg
To me, the most valuable item in my collection is my Super T T1.
An aluminum mod from 2009, it takes a single 16340 battery, or, with the extension, 2 stacked CR2 3 volt batteries for 6 volt vaping bliss.
Right this moment I'm living dangerously vaping it stacked with a 3 ohm PureSmoker cartomizer and a traditional T-tip.
Life is mighty fine.
 

snork

Vaping Master
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
May 30, 2011
6,181
11,235
CO
View attachment 980339View attachment 980340
To me, the most valuable item in my collection is my Super T T1.
An aluminum mod from 2009, it takes a single 16340 battery, or, with the extension, 2 stacked CR2 3 volt batteries for 6 volt vaping bliss.
Right this moment I'm living dangerously vaping it stacked with a 3 ohm PureSmoker cartomizer and a traditional T-tip.
Life is mighty fine.
PXL_20220908_133310426.jpgPXL_20220908_135113368.jpg
The T1 had optional fittings for the various atomizers of the time. This is the cap for the 801 atomizer. The 801's airflow comes from underneath, and David at Super T devised the first stab at making an adjustable airflow by drilling a hole into the side of the cap which feeds air to the atomizer. Then you can incrementally cover up that hole by means of the set screw drilled down from the top. It's funky but works.
Pictured is my unit in the 801 configuration. The gold standard of 801s at the time was Ikenvape, and you see an Ikenvape 3.5ohm HR here. Gold standard or not, 801s were horrible finicky beasts. There's a fine line between leaky flooded mess and dry burnt blech. This one's doing pretty fair though, not to mention the 801 was the precursor and inspiration for the rebuildable atomizers we have today.
 

Pigs

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