I hope Cloupor comes out with a TC mod, because that WILL work. If their previous models are indicative, when they say 100W, they mean 40 

In other words, the lowest possible setting of 100ºC in Ti mode corresponds to 300ºC with SS.
For that, I used TCR 0.001 for (generic) SS.
28 gauge Stainless Steel Wire - Nickel Free - 200 Feet - Introductory – Unkamen Supplies it says in the description that it's 430 SS.It is sure that this one is 430: Stainless Steel Wire - Nickel Free Grade 430 – Unkamen Supplies
But we don't have any information about the 28 gauge version.
28 gauge Stainless Steel Wire - Nickel Free - 200 Feet - Introductory – Unkamen Supplies it says in the description that it's 430 SS.
I've ordered a bunch of 304 and I'll test it quite soon. N200 has pretty much destroyed my palate in two days of moderate vaping... I've switched to titanium and it's now healing. But now I'm quite worried about nickel content, because I come from Kanthal, which doesn't contain nickel at all... let's hope that the 10% in 304 is not enough to trigger my sensitivity.
Any truth to this.
Haven't even started TC vaping waiting on my device. Watched a video were it was said.
"TI wire can produce, TI dust that can catch on fire, need a class D fire extinguisher to put it out.
Also class D are not normal available for home use."
"Water and normal everyday extinguishers will not put this type of fire out."
Kind of scary to hear this though he did say it has to get very hot to produce the white dust.
I cancelled my order on Tuesday as it didn't ship yet and they promised a full refund. I was happy since this NiFe70 is crap.Update from Crazy Wire on their NiFe:
- They're going to send me a replacement shipment of wire
- But they're waiting for their technical guys to have a look at the wire "to make sure we're not sending the same wire to you again"
- They will get that to my for early next week
- He offered to send me a spool or two of something else in the meantime, which I declined - I have all the Titanium, Kanthal, Ni200 etc I could ever need
- I did ask that if they had some wire they thought should be NiFe, but was awaiting testing, then chuck another spool of that in just in case.
- And I suggested a quick and easy way to see if the wire was the same as what I got - measure the resistance of 100mm. Or touch it with a magnet!
So let's see what happens next week.
Reading between the lines it does sound like it's probably more than just someone mis-labelling the wire sent specifically to me. Especially as they don't sell SS 304 in the sizes they sent me, so it's not like they could have just picked up the wrong spools.
I suspect they got sent the wrong wire and are waiting for a re-shipment from the supplier.
In which case what I'm most concerned about is anyone else who bought the wire - did they all get wrong stuff? Do they know to return it? Are they burning wicks and thinking NiFe70 is utter rubbish?
If it is a larger problem I hope CW are going to contact anyone who already received it. I will mention this to them when they next get back to me.
I wish I knew someone who had already ordered and received some so we could compare notes.
might be an obvious answer, but im a simpleton. if i wanted to set a custom tcr, but wanted a more accurate curve, how would one go about figuring the temp/resistance info that the steam engine calc spits out? sorry if this a moronic question.![]()
might be an obvious answer, but im a simpleton. if i wanted to set a custom tcr, but wanted a more accurate curve, how would one go about figuring the temp/resistance info that the steam engine calc spits out? sorry if this a moronic question.![]()
so sorry i'm not very clear, and maybe im making it too complicated for myself.
tony suggested setting a tcr value "Just program a profile with a 0.007 TCR" (i know i can do that with escribe custom wire setting). when i do that, i see that its just a straight line with 3 data points and not 7 (-100, 0, 70, 200, 400, 600, 800), not a more accurate curve with the temp data points.
so if for instance i buy some ss430 from unkaman, and i wanted an accurate tcr csv for that particular wire, should i just create a custom profile, click "special" and type in 0.0014 and live with that (i notice it only has 3 temp points, -100, 70, 800). or, should i somehow figure out what the other temp points are and create a custom profile from that?
i hope im not digging myself deeper, so sorry, and thanks so much for trying to help.
You will be good simply entering TCR. Escribe will take care of the temp/TFR pairs.so sorry i'm not very clear, and maybe im making it too complicated for myself.
tony suggested setting a tcr value "Just program a profile with a 0.007 TCR" (i know i can do that with escribe custom wire setting). when i do that, i see that its just a straight line with 3 temp data points (-100, 70, 800) and not 7 (-100, 0, 70, 200, 400, 600, 800).
so if for instance i buy some ss430 from unkaman, and i wanted an accurate tcr csv for that particular wire, should i just create a custom profile, click "special" and type in 0.0014 and live with that (-100, 70, 800). or, should i somehow figure out what the other temp points are and create a custom profile from that?
i hope im not digging myself deeper, so sorry, and thanks so much for trying to help.
Ah I see, well for what Tony said, you just want to use the Single Value TCR setting to enter 0.007. You're only interested in the TCR at 600°C, and in any case Titanium is very flat so you don't really need a curve.
For the SS 430, @balazsk has done a graph showing several temperature points. And hopefully @vapealone will add it to his spreadsheet, which will include the DNA 200 CSV file for it. And @Dampmaskin will hopefully also add it to Steam Engine in time, also including a DNA 200 file for it.
So I don't think you'll need to do any manual work.
If you do want to know how to do it, here's an example of a CSV file for eScribe:
"Temperature (degF)","Electrical Resistivity"
-58,0.776
68,1
212,1.256
302,1.416
392,1.576
482,1.736
572,1.896
800,2.3013333333
The first column is the degrees in F, the second is the Resistance Factor like you see on Steam Engine. So to create such a file, you would look up the resistance factors for SS 430, usually found in a datasheet, and enter them into that file, Save As something.csv, then Import into eSCribe. Or you can create it in eScribe itself.
I don't know where @balazsk found his resistance factors for SS 430 - I can't find any on Google right now. There must be a data sheet out there that shows them. He probably posted it to this thread as well if we search backwards.