One's home is one's refuge..one's place to become re-energized from daily stresses. "Home" matters to your health.
Move.
Only rent from a less .... retentive, peaceful, landlords. Tip: Intelligence matters.
Advice like this is....... Priceless!!!!
One's home is one's refuge..one's place to become re-energized from daily stresses. "Home" matters to your health.
Move.
Only rent from a less .... retentive, peaceful, landlords. Tip: Intelligence matters.
if it got to that point:
I would probably contest the eviction in court, the purpose of the no vaping rule was put there "in writing I hope" for the purpose of property degradation, so if they can find explicit vape residue, by means of some of test ??? - I would welcome it.. As long as you can cook in the place, I don't see an eviction notice that would stand up... I don't think they could find nicotine contamination anywhere either, unless juice spilled somewhere..
Maybe the management would come about in their rules..
So I've seen a lot of opinions/posts arguing about what is actually exhaled...I think we need to reach a consensus on that first before anything can or cannot be stated about the residue build up. And I agree if it is possible it's probably no worse than frying food.
Playing devils advocate here but some have stated that they do see some buildup in car windshield but not in home because of the amount of area that it takes to dissipate. Couldn't that mean that's just falling to the carpet and getting vacuumed up?
As minute of the buildup that there might be I'd still actually like to know for sure what is being exhaled before we can so no build up so ever. I've never noticed any but still doesn't mean I don't have a little bit of vg/pg that is lingering in the carpet.
Yeah I get your point and really don't feel too worried about myself. I was just stating that we probably need to come to consensus as to what is actually being exhaled to determine if there is NO residue. And I think it's all the sticky tar build up that was so damn hard to clean off windshields not the nicotine.If it's easily wiped off with Windex I doubt it's a serious issue. Not like trying to remove nicotine buildup from walls, etc.
Yeah I get your point and really don't feel too worried about myself. I was just stating that we probably need to come to consensus as to what is actually being exhaled to determine if there is NO residue. And I think it's all the sticky tar build up that was so damn hard to clean off windshields not the nicotine.
I have had a buildup, very slight though, on the windshield ONLY of my vehicle. I attribute it to blowing the vape forward with windows up. Because I am close to the windshield, it cannot naturally evaporate into the air before hitting the windshield. There has never been the residue on the side windows though. I have now taken to blowing the vape downwards and have not had that residue develope on the windshield. It was just a clear, slightly smeary residue that built up over months of vaping in the car. A single windex sheet took care of it very quickly, unlike when there was smoke residue.
I have to reply to this now (even though it may have already been addressed) - PG and/or VG is not thermally (with heat) broken down in an ecig atomizer; or if it is, then the atomizer is not operating correctly. A correctly operating atomizer coil will not reach the temperatures required for thermal decomposition of these compounds. What happens in the atomizer is vaporization; think of boiling water - the liquid and the steam are the same compound (water) in different phases (liquid/gas).
For PG/VG to be broken down into H2O and CO2, the temperature in the atomizer would have to reach ~500 C (~930 F).
Actually, yes you can. The vapor or gas can be trapped on a filter unit which is then attached inline on the Gas Chromatograph (GC). This unit can then be heated to release the gas/vapor and introduced into the GC for analysis. This is just one of the techniques for analysis of gases (vapors) using GC.
when you heat anything to the point it becomes a vapor you are breaking down the chemical bonds when this happens you run the risk of forming new chemicals, especially if the gases are under pressure well being heated.
Heating something to the point it becomes a vapor is simply boiling it. It's unrelated to breaking of chemical bonds. The temperature at which something boils and the temperature at which chemical bonds start breaking are two different things. PG has a low enough boiling point that it will vape well before chemical bonds start breaking. VG has a higher boiling point, but even with VG most will become vapor before any chemical bonds break. In the case of flavorings you're mostly dealing with unknowns.
I vape 100% unflavored PG.
Do you remember the smokeless ashtray ????
There still out there lol