And Dannyben? There's no magic algorithm, it's a lookup table of resistances that correspond to temps, with some fairly simple math to account for whatever baseline you set. As long as it "knows" what the baseline resistance is, the rest is a simple lookup function and delta math. The real magic of both the DNA40 and the SX350J isn't magic math, it's the extreme frequency in which they can check and react to those deltas. Doesn't matter if it's 0.065 or 0.3 baseline in regards to accuracy. It just doesn't.
Think about this...if that coil is 0.065 at rest, and you throw power at it, by the time it's up to the common 400F-ish range of temps people seem to prefer, it's now a 0.6 or higher ohm coil. 10 times the resistance, but it's accurate enough to regulate that just fine. As it would be if the resting resistance was 0.12, or 0.2, or 0.3, and so on. It doesn't matter what the baseline is. It just doesn't.
Think about this too, after you fire, take a vape, then set it down for a minute and fire again, you're still not at 0.065 when the vape starts, because that coil, wick, and atomizer are all still higher than ambient. That 0.065 ohm coil is most likely a 0.1+ coil for the next vape. Yet it's still able to regulate just as well as a cold coil. Why is that? Because where the baseline starts DOES NOT MATTER. IT JUST DOESN'T.
As for Yihi saying 0.065 provides the "optimal" vape, that's a pretty subjective thing, don't you think? Especially when they don't specify HOW you get to that resistance, which could range from 2 wraps of 32ga to 8 or more wraps of 26ga, depending on coil ID, and that doesn't take into account the myriad of atomizers it could be in. And it for sure doesn't account for personal preferences either.