My vaping pen usually works fine, but recently the taste of my usual liquid (15mg/ml nicotine, unflavoured, mostly VG) suddenly went kind of sour on me. I couldn't taste it much at all when I inhaled (which itself seemed odd because I usually get a sweet, satisfying nicotine hit), and when I exhaled it through my nose the sensation gave me the subjective impression that something in the vapour was burnt and I felt very slightly nauseous. I've read that vapour can contain formaldehyde and I immediately suspected that might be the problem, though I also read that it wouldn't happen unless the coil temperature was unnaturally high and that the result would be a taste so foul that the user would not inhale any more of it - to do so was likened to eating burgers that had been charred to a crisp. Naturally I stopped using it, but the strangeness of the taste wasn't that extreme, just a fairly clear warning that something wasn't quite right. I swapped out the heating coil (which I hadn't used for all that long - it had vaped maybe 10ml of liquid when it went wrong) with a new one, and that restored things back to normal.
Some time later when I'd vaped maybe 30ml of liquid through the new coil, I started to notice the same effect, only it was less noticeable than previously. I've read in the UK gov's Science & Technology Report on E-cigarettes that "A study looked at the formation of formaldehyde, which is very toxic. [...] It is an acrid taste called dry puffing, which is unlikely to occur in real-life conditions." So my questions are:
Do you think I'm getting a small amount of formaldehyde under real-life conditions, or is what I've read correct, i.e. that the effect is very unlikely and it would be so acrid and intense that I wouldn't want to continue inhaling for a million dollars?
Do you folks always replace your heating coils as soon as you detect the faintest whiff that something is wrong, or do you take a more relaxed approach?
Some time later when I'd vaped maybe 30ml of liquid through the new coil, I started to notice the same effect, only it was less noticeable than previously. I've read in the UK gov's Science & Technology Report on E-cigarettes that "A study looked at the formation of formaldehyde, which is very toxic. [...] It is an acrid taste called dry puffing, which is unlikely to occur in real-life conditions." So my questions are:
Do you think I'm getting a small amount of formaldehyde under real-life conditions, or is what I've read correct, i.e. that the effect is very unlikely and it would be so acrid and intense that I wouldn't want to continue inhaling for a million dollars?
Do you folks always replace your heating coils as soon as you detect the faintest whiff that something is wrong, or do you take a more relaxed approach?