Ok, I agree with all here. I think I was editing my post while you were finishing yours. There is another thought in my post called "so what is the bottom line" that might clear up some things.
I was only suggesting leg lengths based on the (shortest possible point of contact) vs the (longest possible point of contact) possible in a kanger for the given coil dia. of. 070.
Surely one could make the shortest point of contact longer by bending legs this way and that but the shortest distance between the coil and the grommet a is a straight line. And I'm not advocating that straight legs are the best way to get your point of contact to land at the entry point of the grommet because it's not for me either.
All I am saying is the "effective" combined leg length for an 070 dia coil can be between 8-16mm due to the mechanical properties of the kanger head itself.
So when using 30 awg kanthal it can result in .22 ohms resistance variance(worst case).
Look, I suck with conveying my thoughts accurately and am frequently misunderstood. I am also as stoich as a stump. lol (not really laughing)
Your observations are accurate and the validation important. I understood what you said and it made perfect sense. As Bill pointed out and quite significantly because of the design some variables we contend with are moving targets.
Don't sell yourself short. Not your language, nor observations. All have value. For all of you and all of us.
I make far more mistakes than discovery. And I'm the fellow that's peein' on the electric fence all too often. We none of us have 20/20 vision and even when we do we often choose to fake it. We're amazing creatures but all too often skeptical of the truth before us. Not to mention error which is greater than all of these. And I'm a preponderance of all the above. The only feeble explanation I can offer as an excuse is that I'm tenacious in my persistence. I'm the turtle not the hare. It just takes me a bit longer. And a commitment to writing keeps me honest. So here I am. No greater skeptic than myself.
That said, I labored the longest time with your observation of shortest point to termination when I began vaping, insistent on the logic of that. I paid the price suffering for many weeks with termination issues. Primarily skew. I stubbornly resisted that matter tends to go in the direction sent. And I had to think like an electron. Eventually I realized the the
shortest path was in fact the tightest least interrupted path to the point of termination.
When I was terminating to nearest point, that meant a straight up and down set for the leads. Two problems consistently arose. It's close, very close. So any deviation particularly along the axis is a significant percent of deviation. Of what? The natural diagonal rotation of the wind. If there is lateral pressure from either or both of the leads along the axis…danger Will Robinson! And aven a couple of degrees and a modicum of pull can tug at the ends of the coil and absolutely wreck it. Likewise upward pressure on the leads is more direct from torquing on of the tank or pressure through the 510 interface. These can push up end turns or introduce diagonal turn skew.
This pull or pressure at the leads I'll refer to here as a
straddle of the coil. It doesn't have to be much near the coil at all to present enough energy (force) to reform the coil. How? By destroying the relationship of the turns to each other. Either elongating or skewing the orbit of the turns. Greater energy in that was originally input to create the wind in adhesion initially and even the subsequent alumina oxide fusion. Suddenly, we have no microcoil anymore. We're in a dead short. As if "the effect" didn't exist. It no longer does. "No load". "Atomizer short."
When I realized this I labored for the longest time resisting it. The simplicity of it. Struggling to find some other meaning. Even having devised a solution, turn exit termination, I went back to it. Resisted writing about it. Now
that's stubborn skepticism. But as Albert pointed out, "doing the same thing over and over" doesn't trump
the test of experience. Quite the opposite, it's maddening. Those of us determined to resolve dilemma submit to the obvious truth then. Some more slowly like myself.
Now interestingly, super_X_drifter did point out that sometimes you can come out of these low res dives at res check or burn in by
raking the coil. Really considering this today it occurs to me the answer is fundamental. — we wound to the point of adhesion with tension. If you remove the external stress being imparted to the coil, it has the essence of the memory of itself. Raking it disrupts the disturbed present state and the coil strives to resume a created state at adhesion (if the external energy is inferior). Suddenly you may find that the res perks up towards normal res or the short is resolved. I've labored with this too since I seldom encounter a skew short these days but have to acknowledge that others do, and I see them and this solution work as well.
Mind you though, this is a stop gap. It's better if the wind didn't reflect that skew at all. But it happens. You're going to miss the lead position set every now and then. Let's deal with it.
So there it is, simple solutions made difficult by doubt. An extended termination in the direction of rotation distances the termination point reducing the potential angle of transmittal of strain to the end turn; and if precisely perpendicular as well, reinforces the end turn. A very simple concept…that stopped dead the shorts I was having when I finally just accepted it. Likewise with what seems like
voodoo but isn't. Raking the coils works when res mimics a hanger or a short, some strain is skewing the coil geometry. Often then after raking just completing the burn in permanently fuses the coil.
It's not always easy for us fragile human beings to do what is easy. Often we make things out to be more complex and difficult than they need to be when we discard what's plainly staring us in the face. Headstrong, we choose to knock on every other door instead, or not care which we walk into even as it slams in our face.
Sorry to labor you all by personalizing so much of this. I just felt like sharing tonight that much of this is just as difficult for me as for many of you. Learning doesn't always come easy to any of us. Not the real thing. And I applaud all of you. We're doing a good thing here for ourselves. Help pass it on!
Good luck all.
Not everything that counts can be counted, and not everything that can be counted counts. — A. Einstein