Thanks for all the advice Jan! I'm trying to visualize how you are wrapping the coils around the wick.... do you basically fold like an inch of the wick in half, stick a needle through the wick and wrap the wire around? Yes, Matt...that's basically it. I hold my wick next to the needle, then wrap the coil around both. When I'm finished, I pull the needle out, leaving the wick. I do this for two reasons....I don't want to "choke' the wick by wrapping it too tightly (it needs room to swell) and so that it's sturdy enough to handle.
I watched a video earlier and the guy would basically wrap his wire first onto a screw or something, pull it off and stick a needle through the wick and pull it through the coil. I've done it this way, too. There's no "right" or "wrong" way to do it...it really is just what seems more comfortable/easiest for you. Sometimes if the wire is pretty thin, when you pull the wick through, it'll screw up the little wraps. So...I just like to put the wick in while I'm wrapping. Just a preference.
I'm also seeing a lot of pictures of people's RBA where the wick wraps all around the two posts....so a little more confusion lol. I'm not sure about this. I've seen pictures of wick made out of SS Mesh (stainless steel mesh) which looks like what you're describing. The SS Mesh is rolled up and looks like a post (but it's not) then the coil is wrapped all around it. I'm thinking that's what you're seeing, unless I'm just misunderstanding (which could very well be the case!)
I saw pictures of how Rob does his where basically the wick just goes over the hole horizontally.. seems like the simplest way to do that. One more question (lol I have so many questions sorry) if the wire is a little too long do you wrap it around the post and then screw it on or do you just cut off the excess and THEN put it on? You will have "legs" of wire that go into little holes on the posts. Once I have the legs through the holes on the posts, I screw them in, then cut off the excess. Then I trim my wick so that it's not hanging over the sides, saturate the wick (I use all cotton, so I CAN'T "dry burn" it. I have to juice it up before I hit the button to test it out), and fire it up. When I hear the sizzle and see the vapor, I know it's a go. I screw the top back on and vape myself into a coma.
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THANKS for all your help! I probably will pick one of these up after I practice a little more with the 510 and 306 atomizers I have right now. Stick with what's working for awhile. There's a learning curve with all this stuff, and the bottom line is, get yourself a good vape on, THEN experiment with new stuff.
I'm thinking/hoping we've answered your questions. Ask anything you want....I know how confusing this all can be. These rebuildables were a "new frontier" for me and I was totally intimidated at first. Once I actually jumped on board, I found out that it's not that hard or complicated at all. It's FUN.
Jan
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