@TheBloke, so I guess for the wet coil test you would wick with rayon and wet with vg(290°c bp)? Maybe have some form of controlled airflow like a small fan or maybe a small air compressor with a regulator? Maybe an airbrush compressor or small portable tire inflator? It'll be fun to see the results of your setup. I'm especially interested in your findings for 430ss and NiFe52. Both possible candidates for my evic.
Last time I used cotton, maybe I'll use Rayon this time (though I do have a lot more cotton available that I never use any more!)
I'll start with 50/50 juice because that's a reasonable average of what people use, but yes also vary it from 30% VG up to 100%
I have controlled airflow in the form of a a few sizes of small DC fans - like the kind in a PC. I don't have any of the other airflow items you listed. I did think about getting an air flow measurer, some of which can be had fairly cheaply, but didn't progress it yet. I think for the moment simply always using the same fan at the same voltage would be sufficient.
In past tests I simply directed the fan over the coil. In future tests I migth see if I can localise the airflow in some way, to make it a bit more like a real vape - ie a "chimney" of sorts, albeit probably much larger than an atomizer chimney.
Looking at the DNA40 chart I would definitely be able to detect that.
I can detect my vape getting hotter when the wick begins drying out and cooler when my mech misfires for a second in the middle of a vape (Stingray bad about this).
But do you think those variatiois you detect are as narrow as shown on the DNA 40 chart? The moment-to-moment fluctuations on that chart were never more than a few °C. It move across the range of 20°C in total, but that was over 2 or 3 minutes of continuous firing. It wasn't lurching about second to second.
In any case don't put too much store in that early test result with Ni200. I'll repeat the test with wet coil Titanium in a more controlled way and we'll see what it looks like then.