Havent had a chance to really mess with it, but my 19e just arrived in the mail and it looks great!
to fix the misfires all i did was take some pliers and widen one end of the spring in the button so that it fits snug and makes constant contact with the button housing. Pretty simple to do, but if you havent taken the button apart yet and its glued then thats gonna be a pain.
Mine has the old -style cap on it (#19a style - but with the gold spring instead of the magnet), but from what I understand, you should be able to get the Nzonic top in Brass in the future....at least that's what John at Vaportek said on the Vapers Co-op FB site.Got the shipping notification today for my 19e. Do they have the nzonic cap on these as well?
Did anyone every figure out the best way to get the glued button off the switch? The #19e is hitting great but that long clicky throw is driving me nuts.
Well.....that was interesting.... I just had a catastrophic failure with my new 19e (well, not that bad, but it certainly surprised me). I just switched out the battery for a fresh one (been running this non-stop since I got it a few hours ago), and I think I over-tightened top cap spring & got a short across the top of the battery - the E got VERY hot all of a sudden....I spun it apart right away, so no major damage. Top spring collapsed & partially melted the Delrin around one edge. I don't know if the battery is salvageable, a few burn marks on the top, but it's too hot to mess with at the moment.
It appears that the top spring got cocked a little sideways as I was screwing it in & bit into the top edge of the battery & shorted it across the positive pole. This is the first mod I've had with the top spring, so I'm not used to using one...may have been my fault, but needless to say - the spring is GONE! So is the one in the new Enzonic head I got for my #19a but haven't used yet.
No big deal, it's just held to the underside of the positive pin with a small screw, so I just removed it and now the positive pin just sits right on top of the positive post on the battery. It's working fine (with a different battery).
I'm suddenly liking the old top-magnet arrangement much better.....
Well.....that was interesting.... I just had a catastrophic failure with my new 19e (well, not that bad, but it certainly surprised me). I just switched out the battery for a fresh one (been running this non-stop since I got it a few hours ago), and I think I over-tightened top cap spring & got a short across the top of the battery - the E got VERY hot all of a sudden....I spun it apart right away, so no major damage. Top spring collapsed & partially melted the Delrin around one edge. I don't know if the battery is salvageable, a few burn marks on the top, but it's too hot to mess with at the moment.
It appears that the top spring got cocked a little sideways as I was screwing it in & bit into the top edge of the battery & shorted it across the positive pole. This is the first mod I've had with the top spring, so I'm not used to using one...may have been my fault, but needless to say - the spring is GONE! So is the one in the new Enzonic head I got for my #19a but haven't used yet.
No big deal, the spring is just held to the underside of the positive pin with a small screw, so I just removed it and now the positive pin just sits right on top of the positive post on the battery. It's working fine (with a different battery).
I'm suddenly liking the old top-magnet arrangement much better.....
To get rid of the long throw, at least temporarily (I haven't gotten to the point where I've attempted to take the switch apart yet) - put a brass or copper washer on top of the bottom magnet- that will do the trick (should be conductive but not magnetic-don't use steel, plastic or fiber). Just make sure its not too small so it doesn't rattle around - about 14-15 mm is ideal. I used just a small dab of Noalox underneath to hold it in place.
Easy-Peasy...
Well.....that was interesting.... I just had a catastrophic failure with my new 19e (well, not that bad, but it certainly surprised me). I just switched out the battery for a fresh one (been running this non-stop since I got it a few hours ago), and I think I over-tightened top cap spring & got a short across the top of the battery - the E got VERY hot all of a sudden....I spun it apart right away, so no major damage. Top spring collapsed & partially melted the Delrin around one edge. I don't know if the battery is salvageable, a few burn marks on the top, but it's too hot to mess with at the moment.
It appears that the top spring got cocked a little sideways as I was screwing it in & bit into the top edge of the battery & shorted it across the positive pole. This is the first mod I've had with the top spring, so I'm not used to using one...may have been my fault, but needless to say - the spring is GONE! So is the one in the new Enzonic head I got for my #19a but haven't used yet.
No big deal, the spring is just held to the underside of the positive pin with a small screw, so I just removed it and now the positive pin just sits right on top of the positive post on the battery. It's working fine (with a different battery).
I'm suddenly liking the old top-magnet arrangement much better.....
Yea, I read your post earlier (thanks), but the OCD in me is saying: "I want see what that internal spring is made of and to put the copper wire mod in to see the effect on v drop."This thing hits so well stock - so how far can it really go...
OK Chirren... I got the switch apart on the #19e, and it wasn't too difficult in the long run (though I tried many techniques that have worked for me getting frozen-together Motorcycle parts apart - no joy). I almost used the old-cut-a-slot-in-the-magnet trick, but I wanted to keep the bottom magnet intact (I kind of like it now), and I didn't want to mar the brass button of at all possible.
What finally worked was placing the button on top of my padded vice (any sturdy flat surface with a bit of thin padding will work), pushed the button down so the magnet/cup was above the surface of the Delrin cup, and gave it a couple of good bashes with a nylon-faced hammer (you could also use a piece of plastic/wood/etc and a regular small hammer). Then I just grabbed a pair of my gripper disks (those rubber disks used to help open jars - my new favorite tool for getting stuck MODs apart), put them on either end of the switch and placed it in the palms of my hands & twisted in opposite directions - came apart as clean as can be.
There was absolutely NO glue on the button or post (at least in mine), but brass has a habit of "gripping" to itself much better than most other metals (galling). The force of the blows seemed to have been enough to break their bond so they could be twisted apart...whatever, the switch is fully dissasembled now without any damage or marks whatsoever ...
Let the modding begin!
Good luck