I am hearing the buzz sound also but it doesn't worry me. I will hang on and see how this plays out. This thing is really cool and gives great vape!
For a quick reference...a .10 ohm coil, at 50watts/joules will be at 2.24volts, which comes out to 22.32amps.Retird, I pointed that out last night also but I don't believe anyone commented further. The hum seems to always be there at all joules levels but it is more pronounced at 50J or close to that. What I am concerned about is using such high joules levels and the related 50J pulses will put a heavy stress on a battery. Chain vaping at such high levels may be a safety hazard in my opinion. There will be some of us that may use inferior batteries in this SX mod and may get themselves in trouble.
I am finding more and more that I am liking the joules set between 14-20J for a pleasant vape and not needing or liking the higher settings that I was using just a few days ago on a regular basis. I am sure it is also safer too. JMHO
BTW... I think you may be in the 40 amp range when you are running at 50J.
For a quick reference...a .10 ohm coil, at 50watts/joules will be at 2.24volts, which comes out to 22.32amps.
I just used vapecalc for that, I don't know what extraneous factors or variables affect those numbers on a regulated device in TC mode
When I am firing my .122 resistance coil at 50J I see the voltage counter go as high as 4.24 volts. On vapecalc it shows 145.97 watts and using 34.59 amps. If I change the resistance to .08, which is in Yihi's stated range, and if it still uses 4.0 volts it goes to 50 amps. I don't have anything with such low resistance to see how many volts show up on the SX so that is only a guess. I am thinking this is one of the reasons why Yihi has limited the joules to 50J and even with the dual stack tube.
Re: the hum audio clip posted earlier. I think if you listen carefully while playing it backwards you will hear "Paul is dead". Might just be me.![]()
You don't know Paul McCartney? What planet are you from?If it does say that, it was completely unintentionalI don't even know Paul! LoL
I seriously am about to load up the clip in audacity and play it backwards though, just cause you said that... LoL
I'm not disagreeing with SI. I'm disagreeing with your interpretation of it.
You're interpretating j/s as "joules per second" and not as "joules divided by seconds" which is the correct SI way.
I said I didn't want to discuss this.
Regards
Tony
Sent from my keyboard through my phone or something like that.
Just one more thought on the noise and I done talking about it...
I spent a bit of time reviewing the video posted pages ago and found something interesting to me starting at about 10:40 into the video. Reviewer set the device to 50J with a 0.13 ohm coil set to 400F in Standard mode. He talks about the "heartbeat" (pulse noise") in this part of the video. I then went back and stopped the video at the 11 minute point and verified the readings while firing.
It shows 50J, 0.13 ohms, Standard Mode, 4 volts., 400F..and significant sag in the battery meter........... Using ohm's calculator, if my calculations are correct that's 30 amps or 123 watts.... remember the "heartbeat".. he says it is more pronounced at higher joules setting and not as smooth a sound..... I think this is important.... just my 2 cents...does this sound about right or am I off in the weeds....?
Is this the "coil whine" you refer to?
Nite all..... hope ECF gets the conversion done without issue...
So now I'm trying 30G Ti, 7 wraps, .44 ohms, 290 degrees. It doesn't heat up nearly as much and it's a nice vape but I swear it tastes a little soapy (and I only used alcohol to clean the wire).
I do like this device and technology and I'm going to try some new builds including a nickel/kanthal twisted coil.
Thanks everyone for your posts and insights on this thread. Nice stuff.
This might be an over-simplification, but this is how I would explain it from a lay perspective: An inductor is a device that stores energy in a magnetic field based on the stable movement of current. When the current is not stable (e.g., it increases, decreases, reverses), the magnetic field seeks to resist that change. The greater the size of the change in current, the more the magnetic field seeks to resist that change and accordingly the greater the impact on the magnetic field. So when you're using PWM (as TC does) the more you increase the power, the greater that disturbance to the magnetic field is going to be, and it's the oscillation of the magnetic field that causes the wires in an inductor to audibly shake (assuming coil noise is the problem).
Two ways I know of (there may be more) to prevent an inductor for buzzing are:I remember when the 1st release SXmini S was released, there was an issue with the device not being able to reach it's maximum voltage output of 9.5v. YiHi soon came out with a firmware update that addressed it. That's the nice thing about a user-upgradable board.More than likely, there will be one along to address the buzzing reported on the M Class, if YiHi warrants it necessary..