Damn near everything I've learned about rebuilding PT heads came from this thread and Mac you have consistently pointed me in the right direction.
I hoping this will help someone. I use 28 gauge kanthal with 9 wraps on a 5/64 mandrel on all my heads. The best solution I found for easily building the head is to slide the coil off the mandrel, slide it on round toothpick to hold it in place during the build. Once the toothpick and coil are seated in the head I simply take the ground, pull it snug and bend it to hold the coil in place. Thread the positive through the Silicone Insulator pull it snug and bend it over, add the pin. I clip the remaining leads off while the toothpick is still in the coil to keep it straight.
I'm not a pro by any means but this has worked great for me.
First post in an outstanding thread
Congrats Marc. The fact you're doing well is that you've obviously gotten real good at localization. And paying attention to that, what the design requires as to orientation, pays dividends in flavor and performance. Things are made a certain way for a reason. They don't just make this sh!!t up. They actually pay real engineers real money...well maybe I'm speculating there…something
akin to real money...to come up with working designs. Unfortunately they don't really provide us a lot of info on
best use for us along with that. So we figure it out on this thread.
The second part of this, the crucial part that ultimately handles more than 90% of issues beyond a t.m.c., is how we handle termination. The geometry of our build
in relation to the structure of the tank is equally as important as where we put it. In layman's terms, is the element itself as precise as the tank? In part that's what winding a t.m.c. does…it makes the coil as consistent as reasonably practical to achieve. The tank doesn't behave differently each and every time. The coil shouldn't either.
And that's where winding on a consistent diameter can also add dividends. I'm sure you've read it before, so it's a suggestion to all, get yourself a pin vise and .07" bit. If you think you're getting consistent now…you, with your skills will absolutely nail it. Just a suggestion bro I hope you'll consider.
The other thing which I'm going to start seriously recommending is for you all to try Nextel. I know there are some of you who'll swear they'll never use anything but an organic. But I would ask, why exactly will you be baking your Christmas turkey on a ceramic baking dish??? If your answer is the innocuous nature of the material and its extreme heat resistance then you already know why you should be using Nextel.
The second most important reason to use ceramic wicking is that with a very slight
deflection of this ~2.0mm wick just below .07" you find its optimal and splendid performance. And
that is precisely what the Protank's 1.8mm slot calls for as a maximal wick size. Then this material is like a million miniature hoses delivers eliquid at a rate no other media including organics remotely approaches.
So if you really want to try the grand experiment on what your tank is capable of, try perfecting that. It's a 7-8$ investment which works out to pennies as you can keep on using these coils for months on end. The current 18-turn
monster in a Mega is out like 3 weeks or more. I dry burned and rinsed it the first time a few days ago.
Consequently cig that's when I started having the bothersome flooding issues. And this seems to validate the assumptions that ceramic wick in operation opens up broad internal channels. Cleaning a broken in wick would suddenly make them even more so. And bumping up the power to 19W on this config has totally stabilized it. So this reaffirms the deduction that more power is possible, indeed needed, for Nextel and particularly so as the inter-fiber channels accommodate themselves. And for this particular coil configuration it's a healthy dose at 19W for stability.
For those of you wanting to approximate the Nextel experience, KGD Japanese cotton's fibers are extremely similar and sufficiently more linear than ordinary cotton to simulate the directional flow of synthetics like Eko and Nextel. You'll need a density in the wick slightly tighter than you might use in a dripper. And you'll need the extra material to help fill the slot. It's been a while and I'm sure there are far more of you adept at this aspect of KGD density in the PT than I.
The one thing that won't be happening with Nextel is it won't be sagging
changing its geometry in a day or two and consequently vaporization results unlike KGD, rayon and other materials some suppose are linear wicks.
For me and those of us who can't be rewicking every other day or three ceramic wicking is a true blessing. Within a day or two of break-in practically none of you would know the difference between it and cotton in play a few hours. I know, I've done blind tests on this. In fact many of you will be saying, "That's great! Is that cotton?" (The most common question.)
At the end of the day marc this is about making our lives simpler, the results of our rebuilding reliable and more satisfying.
Great to have you with us!
Good luck.
