Yes, it works fine. I recently tried an experiment with spaced coils (blasphemy, I know), as some claim less gunking, longer wick life. Anyway, I wound the coil on the gizmo with arm tension (I pull down pretty hard), producing a beautiful contact coil Sup would be proud of. Then, with the coil still on the mandrel, I tried to gently pull the coil apart to produce spaces of about a wire width. Blooming thing sprang right back into contact every time. So, I grabbed a piece of 28g wire and threaded it through the turns cranking the handle, same result. I finally grabbed that 1mm mandrel and threaded it through the same way, and got some space between the winds.
The improvement these folks have brought is the ability to get the same coil each and every time without thinking about it. With my calibrated arm, I get very good coils every time, but it isn't the same coil. Thing is, though, when I "arm out" duals, I've never had an issue with the coils matching on heat up time/glow. Without tension, that was a big issue.
Flavored, yes you certainly can, use tension to build open spaced winds. As I've spoken to it helps build a proper symmetrical electrical wind. We've been using them forever. First and important point. Also it builds rigidity so it stabilizes the wind giving it durability without torching. It's preferable always to build uniformity into the wire by electrical pulsing as vapdivrr introduced long ago.
However, such are not microcoils in the functional sense. I encourage newcomers first start with a t.m.c. so that they begin to understand and apply the principles of resistance. It's very hard for peeps without firsthand experience with this to use open winds. Too much math and too much ball-parkin'. So they never develop the sense of building to a target.
I know. I've tried both methods of teaching tension on the outside.
I really do need the support of the community here. If we can get folks to understand this principle of building to a design target. A pin vise giving one the experience of intimacy to the wire nothing else can. Then they quickly get to a point where they can evaluate everything and anything.
That is the reason for my enthusiasm Flavored. I'm most interested that we all get a shot at the basics and the great vape that follows. Thought I'd spell it out here to be clear. I enjoy far more variety than most and love to see more folks get there.
Good luck Flav. And yeah, I do use open winds. So guilty here too! LOL Thanks for the affirmations on the benefits of strain.
p.s. Even using strain it's exceedingly difficult to get two matched pairs. Irregularities of the wire surface and diameter themselves, although subtle, are so substantial as to make a perfect adhesion unlikely in practical terms.
p.s.s One of my earliest posts introducing the concepts of strain in the Fall of 2013 on the Protank Microcoil Discussion using a forceps and manual strain. Nowhere nears the degree of consistency of a pin vise or gizmo style jig. I just did not believe people would ever view a spool as a tool. I was mistaken.

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