Not sure I understand this. Are you saying you didn't inhale at subohms?
I'm saying there are those that don't .......... perhaps because they can't because of their build quality, but still say they like sub ohm vaping. Anyone that has played with sub ohm has probably built a blowtorch or two while learning about proper air flow for sub ohm vaping.
I'm saying there are those that don't .......... perhaps because they can't because of their build quality, but still say they like sub ohm vaping. Anyone that has played with sub ohm has probably built a blowtorch or two while learning about proper air flow for sub ohm vaping.
this thread has turned into a battle, I was just asking if I could get the same advantages of sub ohm waters by using microcoils and vw device, From what I'm reading I think I can go ankle deep but not more deeper... right?
I have to call shens on this, I don't think it's possible to get a decent subohm cloud if you aren't inhaling, and pretty hard too.
You can do very well at an honest 15w. It's about comparable to a .8-.9 ohm coil on a mech. The trick is to build the atomizer like a subohm atomizer, but use a packed/microcoil.
I can no longer argue with stupid! Have a nice day
I think one of the problems with sub-ohm vaping is the name. It has a special name, so people assume that there's something different or special about it. They seem to think that it's going to be an "upgrade" to their vaping experience. That it's "the next step up". Vaping at 0.5 ohms is no different from vaping at 1.5 or 2.5 ohms. It's just like turning the power on a VV or VW device up. If your device doesn't have adjustable voltage or power and you want a hotter coil, you lower the coil resistance until you find the right power level for you. Nothing special is going to happen when you drop below 1 ohm. The result is exactly the same as what you'd get if you just turned up the voltage. If turning up the voltage doesn't make your juice taste better, reducing the coil resistance won't either.
i agree... about the difference.Oh man ... while you're right that specific resistance thresholds aren't inherently meaningful, the way a typical .5 ohm coil works is WAY different from a typical 1.5 or 2.5 ohm coil pumping 30 watts through. The concept of subohm encompasses an entire atomizer building theory; perhaps it should be known as very high wattage vaping.
this thread has turned into a battle, I was just asking if I could get the same advantages of sub ohm waters by using microcoils and vw device, From what I'm reading I think I can go ankle deep but not more deeper... right?
Let's keep this discussion civil or the mods will close this thread. It's too important of a subject for that to happen. This happens to be the most controversial topic in vaping today, so I can understand the back and forth bantering. But when discussion becomes arguing and things get personal this serves no useful purpose.
Hopefully everyone can agree that there is a potential general risk involved in just using our ordinary protected or IMR batteries with normal ohms, and that the risk can increase substantially if someone unknowingly uses the wrong batteries which are not able to put out the amps that sub ohms require. The point I'm trying to make is let's educate, teach, and learn from each other. Safety should be the number one priority in everyone's setup.
this thread has turned into a battle, I was just asking if I could get the same advantages of sub ohm waters by using microcoils and vw device, From what I'm reading I think I can go ankle deep but not more deeper... right?