A fog machine does not sub-ohm.
Just a thought, but consider that fog machines do not need to sub ohm. They don't have batteries with limits, they have 120v outlets with limits. That's how you wind up with a 3000 watt fog machine like mine that can fill a warehouse to literally white-out levels in 10 minutes
Isn't there a higher voltage battery out there? Why tweak the resistance to the point of cell damage..... I dont understand why we adjust the dangerous variable to boost wattage when we could adjust the voltage. Someone please chime in and tell me why this isnt practiced.
Excellent question. Honestly, I don't even know. Maybe size requirements or charge times? I'd love to hear more about this if anyone's in the know as well.
That being said, almost every vv/vw device will push beyond the 4.2v battery's highest voltage, but I find most are hindered by amperage limits. Seems to be changing though.
I'm all for progress and experimenting. Then again there's a difference between pushing limits and bashing ones head against a (imo) misinterpreted dead end of diminishing returns. I think high-powered multi-cell regulated mods will be a better cloud chasing tool than any single cell mech.
Actually, I entirely agree. High-watt multi-cell is the way of the future IMO. See above.
And as a super-sub-ohmer, I also agree with the diminishing returns. It seems like there's a big jump from .3-.2 ohms for me, but not nearly the same jump from .2-.1 IME. Plus, I incur the additional risk. And sometimes I burn my nose hairs.
It is my belief that progress takes risk. Certainly, inventors faced quite a lot of risk when we were first learning to fly. But that's why we have test pilots who vape sub-ohm at mock 8 in the cockpit
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