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Rebuildable atty

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Lonely^Driver

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Hi guys, does thickness of the wick & number of coils change the taste & vapor of the juice?
Thank you.

Thickness of wick/mesh/(any other liquid holding material) = No
Number of coils = different in length of resistance wire = Yes

* My above mention applies to getting more/less flavour of a particular liquid you put on and vapour. Does not apply to change the taste. Kinda difficult to have a fruity flavour changing to a tobacco flavour and vice versa with just varying the setup without changing the liquid.

Hope this helps.
 

petermaxx

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Thickness of wick/mesh/(any other liquid holding material) = No
Number of coils = different in length of resistance wire = Yes

* My above mention applies to getting more/less flavour of a particular liquid you put on and vapour. Does not apply to change the taste. Kinda difficult to have a fruity flavour changing to a tobacco flavour and vice versa with just varying the setup without changing the liquid.

Hope this helps.
How about the vapours......
Thanks
 

Lonely^Driver

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How about the vapours......
Thanks


Amount of vapours is how effective the coil is vaporizing the liquid. Lower the resistance = higher heat = more effective in burning the liquid.
Depending on the type of wire you use but in general more coils = longer resistance wire = higher resistance.
 

petermaxx

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Can i also ask a question?
1. Eg. using 32Awg wire, what ohm will i get if wrap 4 coils around wick? Will number of coil wrap make a difference?
As Lonely Driver has answer your 2nd question :)
in general more coils = longer resistance wire = higher resistance.
 

Drunkendori

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No idea?!
depending on the thickness of the kanthal/nichrome and wick u're using. 32AWG(approx 0.2mm) coil to 4 rounds on 2mm diameter wick would give you roughly 1.8 - 2.0 ohms. After roughly a day of vaping it would drop by approx 10% and level off.

So can I say it's not the number of coils that matter it's the length of the resistance wire that matters right? Longer means can coil more rounds but doesn't affect the rating at all right?
 

Lonely^Driver

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So can I say it's not the number of coils that matter it's the length of the resistance wire that matters right? Longer means can coil more rounds but doesn't affect the rating at all right?

Half correct. Why?
Assuming we are only talking about fix voltage. Not touching into Variable voltage.
Indeed it will be the resistance that will be providing the heat source thus the lower the resistance the better vaporizing of the liquid on wicking material.
But having more coils does helps also as it means heating up more surface area of the wicking material thus more vapour too.
Nobody can tell you what is corrct or wrong. Some wraps 2 coils and they say their setup is fantastic. Others wrap 6 coils and say their setup is awsome. You have to slowly play around with different kinds of setups to get the ultimate setup for yourself for rebuiltables. That is why there is different sizes of Nichrome wire or different guages of Kanthal wire.
 

Domtine

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So can I say it's not the number of coils that matter it's the length of the resistance wire that matters right? Longer means can coil more rounds but doesn't affect the rating at all right?

Ok... Let me fill u in on a bit of technical basics.

AWG = American Wire Gauge. XXAWG or XXGauge means the diameter of the wire. Bigger number = smaller diameter and vice versa. (don't as me why big is small and small is big. ask the Yanks)

Nichrome/Kanthal has a specification called Ohms/foot or Ohms/meter depending on where u're from. Which means that Bigger gauge wires being thinner has higher resistance and smaller gauge wires being thicker have lower resistance.

So the longer the kanthal/nichrome the higher the resistance given that they are of the same gauge.

For hand coiling purposes, I recommend 32AWG or 34AWG . Anything thinner than that won't have the strength to withstand the repeated heating and cooling.
 

Galaxy3

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Ok... Let me fill u in on a bit of technical basics.

AWG = American Wire Gauge. XXAWG or XXGauge means the diameter of the wire. Bigger number = smaller diameter and vice versa. (don't as me why big is small and small is big. ask the Yanks)

Nichrome/Kanthal has a specification called Ohms/foot or Ohms/meter depending on where u're from. Which means that Bigger gauge wires being thinner has higher resistance and smaller gauge wires being thicker have lower resistance.

So the longer the kanthal/nichrome the higher the resistance given that they are of the same gauge.

For hand coiling purposes, I recommend 32AWG or 34AWG . Anything thinner than that won't have the strength to withstand the repeated heating and cooling.

How about Kanthal D - 0,20 mm?

How does it compare to the 32AWG?
 

Currynoah

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