My 26 gauge 50 meters of $10 FT no grade Ti has shipped, in a couple of weeks I'll be saying how good or bad it is.
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So the question is, is NiFe52 just as good for vaping as NiFe70 / Alloy 120 / Resistherm NiFe30? It's definitely different - all the other wires we've looked at are 30% Ni, this is 52%.
I Have been working with Alloy 52 for some time now & It's Great. Educating people on how to properly use it is another storyOn the version I'm working with Dry cotton just starts turning light brown when set to 330°F on a DNA-40 or approximately 73% the temp of Ni 200 dry burn test set to 450°F. As has been discussed about the Resistherm vs NiFe70 vs Alloy 120, they're all a little different. Same goes for NiFe 52 AKA Perniffer 52, Glass seal 52, Alloy 52, Nilo 52, Nifethal 52, Carpenter 52 etc. The nickel content varies from 50.5 - 52% along with variations in the trace elements. The Advantages of NiFe 52 vs 70 are as The Bloke pointed out, much higher resistance Almost double that of NiFe 70 & 4.5 x more than Ni200. Another big advantage is that at <52% Nickel content it's quite possible that those with Nickel sensitivities will be able to use it. I'd love to know if anyone is aware of someone with a Nickel sensitivities successfully using Resitherm @70% Nickel.
With the lower TCR it increases the resistance range for max power on any TC mod. That's really important since were now talking about temp control with "resistance wire". We need to be able to start with higher initial cold resistance.
The down side is that you can easily build a coil/coils with both mass & resistance, thus quickly outpacing a 40 watt device. Looks like the down side will be short lived though with all the new high powered TC devices![]()
So My theory "2 heads are not always better then 1"![]()
The A52 coil becomes an analog processor on a tube mech due to ohms law, however when installed on a VW device set to watt mode I think the "2" processors work against each other. My understanding is that most if not all non TC, VV-VW devices check initial atty ohm & then calculate the Fixed Voltage required to deliver the set watts. I think what will happen is the coil will fire cold at the fixed volts required for your initial desired watt & then due to ohms law the power/watts will be cut in a detrimental way ending up at about half of what you want when the coil gets to temp.
If I'm not wrong Nifethal 70 and NiFe30 contain about 70% Ni and 30% Fe.
So from this point of view Nifethal 52 is better if we accept that the lower Nickel content is better. And there is Nifethal 36 too what contains less Ni. This one has lower TCR accordingly (0.0026 between 20 and 250°C, if I remember well).
The huge difference of TCR is strange between Resistherm and Nifethal70 because both of them contain the same amount of Ni and Fe based on their datasheets.
I had been wondering if there was any disadvantage to vaping, like maybe it is really brittle, or really springy, or the flavour is not as good, or I don't know what. I was just trying to understand why Dicodes chose Resistherm over NiFe52 when on paper NiFe52 seems so much better in every respect. I wondered if there was a "hidden factor".
In terms of Resistherm vs Nifethal70/A120 I personally blame the Cr content for the difference. It seems, Cr in an alloy tend to reduce TCR and straighten the Resistance change curve. But this is just a wild guess.If I'm not wrong Nifethal 70 and NiFe30 contain about 70% Ni and 30% Fe.
So from this point of view Nifethal 52 is better if we accept that the lower Nickel content is better. And there is Nifethal 36 too what contains less Ni. This one has lower TCR accordingly (0.0026 between 20 and 250°C, if I remember well).
The huge difference of TCR is strange between Resistherm and Nifethal70 because both of them contain the same amount of Ni and Fe based on their datasheets.
Sorry guys for my English, it's night.![]()
I am just guessing, maybe Dicodes has chosen a wire from Germany, from a domestic company what can make the cooperation easier. Anyway, I think Resistherm is even better material for vaping than Ni200 despite of it's disadvantages.
Every wire is better than Ni200![]()
If only I could find some detailed TFR orR@different temp data for it(...) And there is Nifethal 36 too what contains less Ni. This one has lower TCR accordingly (0.0026 between 20 and 250°C, if I remember well).
(...)
This is definitely true!Although I have seen some trials with silver wire..
Sorry, I mixed up the value with niobium.If only I could find some detailed TFR orR@different temp data for it![]()
It was just a demonstration by a Hungarian reviewer to show why it isn't suitable for vaping.I have often wondered about silver - though I figured the low resistance and high cost made it unsuitable.
You have seen trials of it? Was it very bad then?![]()
I Have been working with Alloy 52 for some time now & It's Great. Educating people on how to properly use it is another storyOn the version I'm working with Dry cotton just starts turning light brown when set to 330°F on a DNA-40 or approximately 73% the temp of Ni 200 dry burn test set to 450°F. As has been discussed about the Resistherm vs NiFe70 vs Alloy 120, they're all a little different. Same goes for NiFe 52 AKA Perniffer 52, Glass seal 52, Alloy 52, Nilo 52, Nifethal 52, Carpenter 52 etc. The nickel content varies from 50.5 - 52% along with variations in the trace elements. The Advantages of NiFe 52 vs 70 are as The Bloke pointed out, much higher resistance Almost double that of NiFe 70 & 4.5 x more than Ni200. Another big advantage is that at <52% Nickel content it's quite possible that those with Nickel sensitivities will be able to use it. I'd love to know if anyone is aware of someone with a Nickel sensitivities successfully using Resitherm @70% Nickel.
With the lower TCR it increases the resistance range for max power on any TC mod. That's really important since were now talking about temp control with "resistance wire". We need to be able to start with higher initial cold resistance.
The down side is that you can easily build a coil/coils with both mass & resistance, thus quickly outpacing a 40 watt device. Looks like the down side will be short lived though with all the new high powered TC devices
Bloke - If your Game I've got an experiment in mind for you. I think NiFe alloy coils should be only be used in VV mode if run on a VV-VW device. It seems the only device I don't own is a non TC, VV-VW device to test this theory. With Alloy 52 or even 120 it's easy to build a coil at an appropriate resistance level , say .4Ω that allows the atty to be interchanged between Temp control, VV-VW devices, or even a tube mech. I have tested a Kayfun with a 9 wrap 28ga A52 coiled on 2mm mandrel that is .42 Ω. It works great in TC mode on a DNA-40 & works really well on a 18650 tube mech. On the mech it fires at 40watts @ 4.1v with a .42Ω @68°F coil raising to .8Ω at 450°F at which point it's only drawing 20 watts (same as a traditional kanthal A1 .8 Kayfun build).
So My theory "2 heads are not always better then 1"![]()
The A52 coil becomes an analog processor on a tube mech due to ohms law, however when installed on a VW device set to watt mode I think the "2" processors work against each other. My understanding is that most if not all non TC, VV-VW devices check initial atty ohm & then calculate the Fixed Voltage required to deliver the set watts. I think what will happen is the coil will fire cold at the fixed volts required for your initial desired watt & then due to ohms law the power/watts will be cut in a detrimental way ending up at about half of what you want when the coil gets to temp.
Ex. Using the tube mod example above, I know I like vaping a .8Ω on a kayfun at 4.1v & So with A52 I build the coil @.42Ω for the desired hot resistance of .8Ω & get the added benefits of a pre-heat boost (40 watts on cold coil). The boost is needed because My .42Ω A52 coil is roughly twice the mass (.8158gr) of the equivalent .8Ω Kanthal A1 coil (.3964gr). Now if I put my Kayfun on a VW device and set it to the wattage I like to vape at (20watts), the device will see the initial resistance .42Ω & lock the voltage at 2.9V. Now my coil will fire cold at 20 watt with a really slow ramp up since it's double the mass coupled with the fact that the non TC device does not "I think" monitor resistance in VW mode so I wind up vaping at 10 watts when & if the coil ever gets to temp.
I have confirmed that a DNA-40 even in watt mode monitors resistance dynamically to maintain set watts. I have a video of DNA-40 screen firing A52 from cold to glow in watt mode. Voltage follows resistance in real time. It keeps up just fine. Now if I could just figure out how to upload or embed a video??