You can use it in power mode it is not specifically for TC. I have a SS build I am vaping right now at 80watts. This is all old news.
Yeahh..trying to gather up more info on SS..till then i'll stick with ti coils..It's a fake pic, dude. However, this scenario is real if you don't know what you are doing.
Exclusive: Man Severely Injured After eCigarette Blows Up In His Face - Story | KSAZ

Im not sure about the type of SS they using..316 or 304..have to check on that..but it costs 1/8 of khantal..With 26g 316l ss wire you need about 8 wraps with a 3mm id to reach about .3 ohms with a dual coil setup.
Bigego posted 1 note to this thread and has not responded,,, not expecting him to reply hereJust alcohol and paper towels. Just to remove any machine oil, graphite, or other gunk that comes from manufacturing.
Also, ignore the other guy. SS is fine for vaping, but it's probably more suited for TC devices.
Are you using 316 SS?You can use it in power mode it is not specifically for TC. I have a SS build I am vaping right now at 80watts. This is all old news.
I like how it reads " Severely Injured " should have read , ( Fatally Injured )It's a fake pic, dude. However, this scenario is real if you don't know what you are doing.
Exclusive: Man Severely Injured After eCigarette Blows Up In His Face - Story | KSAZ
Not a problem..im seeking for opinions..maybe some of us had the experience using SS..just want to clarify either its safe or not..will advice my friends if the SS harmfulBigego posted 1 note to this thread and has not responded,,, not expecting him to reply here
Ignore the other guy,,,, really!!!!
Do you know for a fact that SS wire can be used.
Heck,,, you can use jumper cables,, of course you'll want to strip the plastic insulation off it first, maybe not!!!!!!
If coils use resistance wires, I would suggest you should use resistance wire.
I believe SS wire is not recognized as a resistant wire.
What's the big problem to get some kanthal or nichrom.
But they can get it at the tackle shop for $0.025555 !!!!!!Lol, Kanthal costs like $4.25 for 100 feet and free shipping - that's about what, almost $0.03 worth of wire in a coil?
Yes I am using SS 316LAre you using 316 SS?
lol - yeah - was a little surprised at the 'ignore the other guy' bit... especially given that edyle usually knows what he is talking about and gives pretty solid advice/ insight... but, given the poster's name...Bigego posted 1 note to this thread and has not responded,,, not expecting him to reply here
Ignore the other guy,,,, really!!!!
Do you know for a fact that SS wire can be used.
Heck,,, you can use jumper cables,, of course you'll want to strip the plastic insulation off it first, maybe not!!!!!!
If coils use resistance wires, I would suggest you should use resistance wire.
I believe SS wire is not recognized as a resistant wire.
What's the big problem to get some kanthal or nichrom.
Just curious. Why would anybody use ss wire? It's not resistance wire.
How is TC going to work with SS, when it's calculating based on the known resistance of particular metals (nickel) to estimate the temperature? I'd expect SS would totally fail a TC controller.
I honestly don't know how SS heats under voltage. Might work. Might short. Not gonna try it, lol.
The benefit is that it has a much lower resistance per length vs kanthal. So you can build a much larger coil while maintaining a lower resistance.Nickel is not a resistance wire either -- in fact, it is often labeled "non-resistance wire" -- yet we still use it in vaping. Why? Because of its high temperature coefficient of resistance (TCR). This means slight resistance changes correlate to temperature fluctuations which are highly predictable and well known. That's how the TC mods limit the temperature: they take the starting resistance of the cold atomizer and monitor its resistance change as it's fired. If you know the starting resistance and temperature, and if you know how much that resistance has changed, then you can easily calculate the temperature of the wire. This is why Evolv always warned to place an atomizer at room temperature on the mod. They did this to get that baseline temp and resistance.
All metals (and alloys) have a TCR, including Kanthal. The problem with Kanthal is that the TCR is so small that it would take a super accurate and sensitive ohm meter to detect -- something we probably can't do affordably in consumer grade electronics.
Stainless Steel's TCR isn't as high as nickel or titanium, but it's still higher than Kanthal (FeAlCr) and thus its possible to use current tech to use it rather accurately. You can use SS as a TC wire already on the Dicodes and DNA-200 mods (those mods let you adjust the TCR manually). Indeed, with mods like the DNA-200 you can use a bunch of wire (if you can afford it) like Gold, Silver, Platinum, Nickel, Titanium, Tungsten. Or you can use alloys like SS or the various NiFe alloys (NiFe70, etc).
For regular unregulated vaping, I don't see the benefits of SS. As long as you can build it at a safe resistance, I don't think it would do any harm, but I see no advantages of it over Kanthal.
Nickel is not a resistance wire either -- in fact, it is often labeled "non-resistance wire" -- yet we still use it in vaping. Why? Because of its high temperature coefficient of resistance (TCR). This means slight resistance changes correlate to temperature fluctuations which are highly predictable and well known. That's how the TC mods limit the temperature: they take the starting resistance of the cold atomizer and monitor its resistance change as it's fired. If you know the starting resistance and temperature, and if you know how much that resistance has changed, then you can easily calculate the temperature of the wire. This is why Evolv always warned to place an atomizer at room temperature on the mod. They did this to get that baseline temp and resistance.
All metals (and alloys) have a TCR, including Kanthal. The problem with Kanthal is that the TCR is so small that it would take a super accurate and sensitive ohm meter to detect -- something we probably can't do affordably in consumer grade electronics.
Stainless Steel's TCR isn't as high as nickel or titanium, but it's still higher than Kanthal (FeAlCr) and thus its possible to use current tech to use it rather accurately. You can use SS as a TC wire already on the Dicodes and DNA-200 mods (those mods let you adjust the TCR manually). Indeed, with mods like the DNA-200 you can use a bunch of wire (if you can afford it) like Gold, Silver, Platinum, Nickel, Titanium, Tungsten. Or you can use alloys like SS or the various NiFe alloys (NiFe70, etc).
For regular unregulated vaping, I don't see the benefits of SS. As long as you can build it at a safe resistance, I don't think it would do any harm, but I see no advantages of it over Kanthal.
How is TC going to work with SS, when it's calculating based on the known resistance of particular metals (nickel) to estimate the temperature? I'd expect SS would totally fail a TC controller.
I honestly don't know how SS heats under voltage. Might work. Might short. Not gonna try it, lol.