How bad do ya want it?
...Tension winding, while preferred, is far too difficult for many (most?) vapers to perform. It's a huge hurdle for those with dexterity/strength issues due to age or malady...
Well I thought so too alden. Much less pay for a special instrument to do it. Even if 5$. I myself have motor control and coordination issues (micro spasm, sounds funny, it ain't). Tried it. Found it. Than fail, after fail. But even as I knew how successfully a pin vise has been used, or something akin to it, throughout history in the arts, crafts, industry…I found out those preconceptions (my own) about what people
might approve of was more of an inhibition to me to make the effort and succeed than the reality that so many had found it to be useful. Too much work, I indulged in thinking. Funny how the mind works.
Being dedicated to the idea of impartiality I kept on working the test alongside screw winds, hand winds, manual and assisted tensioning by other means. It wasn't long, a few weeks, that applying pin vise strain clearly proved to make a neater coil reliably with lots less fiddly. Within a month I'd confirmed that adhesion was indeed repeatable (by others). My own consistency soon followed.
Yes, I am the worst skeptic that I know. And it would've been just as easy to say.
Hey, it doesn't work for me now, prolly won't for most. Rather I found what it took to make it work.
They made it happen for me. People just like you.
And there is no question that it does to the countless folks I've trained who rely upon it. At such an extraordinary success rate that I can't dismiss the fact that practical exceptions are but a few. Virtually anyone
can wind a typical 9-turn, 29 AWG on 2.0mm within a minute and in
adhesion. The proposition that it requires more effort or complexity than that is what I failed to prove. And that's what compelled me for a great many reasons to put this out there since Oct 2013. That a simple means exists for us to master a control of our own vape.
I am utterly grateful to those dozens of people who submitted themselves to these early experiments. Who were willing and curious to get to a solution themselves. Without them and their dedicated self-interest I would have failed.
Skype me, I'll show you the 30-second wind. But you'll have to build it.
Good luck alden.
