Being a missionary is hard work. I don't have anywhere near the patience for it.
I swear..you can't make this stuff up! And if it were a book, we wouldn't believe it.I've come to the conclusion that some people aren't good with anything mechanical. I got my friend the simplest thing I could find, an Lea. All she had to do was fill up the clearo and push a button. This chick has killed computers by trying to yank out a cord from the tower that just had to be unscrewed. Seriously. And don't get me started on the vacuums she's murdered.
So she got the hang of filling up and went on her merry way. I get a call a few days later that the darn thing won't charge. She said it's been plugged into her laptop for 2 days and nothing.
Me: Is your laptop on and plugged in?
Her: No. I haven't used it in awhile.
Me:...![]()
I am lucky. I take my converts to a local brick and mortar. Sure, I could set them up with discount/free gear, but then they would act like fools.
I love the OP's buddy "you have to screw it in?". Yeah, it has threads, it has to be screwed in... When the noobs buy something new, they pay attention when the clerk at the counter explains it. They are laying down 50-60 bucks plus juices, they take better care of it. When they have gear issues, I don't get those questions from them like I have sold them something that does not work, to make a fast thirty bucks on my broken junk...I have so little patience for the phone calls where they are almost demanding you fix their issues.
There is a reason most vapers start with a cig-a-like (I started with a blu), work up to some simple single voltage device, then get a twist or the like, then get into VV upper end devices. This progression seems to take 4-12 months, depending on the individual, when they are a "pioneer user". I describe a user who has only ECF/online support as they are learning to vape as a "pioneer user". I vaped for a full month before I found ECF, so me and my girlfriend were truly on our own. But when I found ECF, I was ready to learn. My questions were already worked on, considered thoroughly and culled over many times.
Don't baby your noobs! Let them learn on their own, or they just act brain dead.
Taniger, I'm curious. Are the inmates allowed to vape?
Now, imagine if your rant related to your own Mom and Dad! Welcome to my world. I have to DIY their nicquid (luckily it's straight menthol 20mg 50/50). I buy all their supplies, as they're interwebz-deficient. Basically, it's just press this button and vape. If anything goes awry, it's all Hell breakin' loose with disappointment and threats to take up smoking again. I threaten to break fingers, so they can't do either. *It's in jest, but really?
Tell your co-worker that there's a $5 service fee for calling you with questions that he/she could find answers for, themself by meeting the fine world of ECF.
The truth is, I think, that most ppl begin vaping just to get off cigs & they don't want (or need) anything complicated. For most of em a cig-alike w/the replacement cartridges might actually be the best solution. It's what I was using when I found ECF & I remember thinking what awful mostrositys the APVs appeared to be. Variable voltage? Digital read-outs? Really? And those HUGE tank looking things on the top...in my mind this stuff was just for 'connessuiers' & I needn't bother. After all, I was just using vaping to quit smoking. Then I got to reading more here...
...but my point is that a majority of vapers will never aspire to get a Provari w/a Zen RBA on it. They just want something as simple & reliable as the cigarettes are that they're trying to beat. For those ppl a clearomizer on an ego battery may be on the outside limits of what they think they should have to vape.