lol dave... i was just back on this thread from my bookmarks yesterday thinking it might be time for a bump 
bumped for justice and for evie!!!
Thank you Fallen69.Your a sweetie.
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great write up.
imma order some kanthal to try.
not enjoying paying more than 2 bux each coil for about 5 days of use.
and cleaning the coils don't quite cut it.
coil cost about 50 cents or more a day!
(im trying to beat $1.66 / day smoking rate and have not yet been able to at about 3.5mL + per day)
great write up.
imma order some kanthal to try.
not enjoying paying more than 2 bux each coil for about 5 days of use.
and cleaning the coils don't quite cut it.
coil cost about 50 cents or more a day!
(im trying to beat $1.66 / day smoking rate and have not yet been able to at about 3.5mL + per day)
IMO, you could skip the kanthal wire in favor of replacing the Silica wicks, as they degrade far quicker than when the coil will cease to fire on. Plus, you could dry burn the coils between replacement wicks.
Joe13 -- THANK YOU!
Without this tutorial, I would never have tried to rebuild these coils. Small, cramped places are not to my liking, especially with damaged nerves and hands. But, nonetheless, you walked me through it, plainly, simply and easily. And I am vaping proof that it can be done!
I just rebuild my T2 coils with 28 gauge Kanthal. More of a nano-coil than micro. 9 wraps. Comes out to 1.3 ohms. Wicked with cotton. The rubber grommet was a pain, but snipping the excess wires was harder. But no shorts and it is vaping beautifully.
My Fogger V2 is more difficult to rebuild correctly than these. But, 1.3 ohms is about the highest you can get with 28 gauge, since there wasn't any more room for wraps. But 1.3 works and vapes very well indeed.
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I totally agree with this - In the Halo Triton coil assembly, the wire coils will far outlast the silica wicks. Regular cleaning will prolong its lifetime, but silica is glass, the strands will break from wear-and-tear, and it will begin to fray, adversely affecting the performance.
Dry burning an old coil and installing new silica wicks will make the coil operate like new with very little effort.
Of course, if the coil is physically damaged (or becomes damaged when pulling out a gunked up wick), installing a new coil is the only option.