And, then this happened...would be the story you'd try to sell to the fire inspector.
To the OP,
Props to you for having the gulls to post this, I'm sorry that more productive preventitve measures weren't offered as the replies as it would have helped a lot of folks try to catch the errors before they happen. Newbies don't know to look for tears in the wrapping, tears in the bottom cover and general battery safety or make up isn't highly discussed. Also I was hoping to have someone explain how to re-wrap a battery would be nice. I would say for you to have a battery bag would have been a good thing to have laying around, they are designed to contain the acid and toxic chemicals that are released (also the heat as well).
On to the ohm meter, seriously, ok...Yes I'll give you that some models are not as accurate as others, and the price you pay does reflect quality however these meters are used to test way more sensitive equipment then us as vapers will ever use. Even if it tells you nothing more then the MOD isn't dead shorted then this is what you would want to know at the minimum. Vape safe and vape happy, ensure that your equipment is up to working standards and you should be fine.
Everyone Else
Professional Vapors, really since when is this a profession and why wasn't I notified of it. At the most this is a hobby and that's stretching the truth a lot. The hard truth about all is its a device that delivers nic to help you get off the Analog Cigs, that's pretty much it. To classify something is to apply a label which then the FDA can slap more restrictions on.
No oHm Meter, seriously you think because you check twice that everything will be just fine, shorts happen and it does not have to be your coils, it can be internal parts or the insulator melted because of the sub ohming, it could a piece of wire bridged the positive and negative pin. To ignore the facts that this can happen is just insane and very unsafe, as I've mentioned in previous articles that we are the stewards of this community and we will be weighed, tried and judged by the FDA by our actions, all of our actions. Please don't let these be stories of unsafe practices and laziness as it will just compound the issues.
I can agree that OP didn't take safety in to account here, that the battery should be replaced sooner but in reality how many of you'll have tucked a battery in your pocket and ran with it, or didn't replace the wrapping on that old reliable cell that you've got. It would be a lot better for the new folks to have solutions then anything else as they will learn from our mistakes. Safety should be first and foremost before you even think about making that circuit, as mentioned before that 99% of issues can be prevented or eliminated with just a few min of work. Please invest in a battery box if you haven't already, this is some advice I've learned the hard way myself.
For those who are really not caring about safety and taking it as nothing important you've seen the damage that this can do, its not kept in secret or classified and understand that the media and various other opposing organizations are looking for this information. One incident can impact the whole community and if that is your intent then I'm sorry that it is. Be villigant in your checks and take safety as a serious matter because it is, I can't stress this enough.
Sub Ohm'ing is dangerous, there is no way to word it otherwise. Its not about venting of batteries but the lack of understanding the internal workings of MOD's in general and how resistors work (your coil is a resistor without the ceramic heat dissipater). Its not something "Cool" or "Awesome" to vent batteries and build dangerous mods, your not proving anything by risking your life building super low ohms. No one other then those who are part of the Sub Ohm clique really care that your running a .xx mod in truth. I don't know where the glamor in the sub ohm culture came from but eventually its going to get people hurt, this is something that I don't advocate at all so I personally can not support it. Now, the retract of the statement is if your doing it for a reason, a real honest reason then I can see it. I run .5 ohm, but this is due to the Sigelei box mod can achieve direct drive voltage at 100 watts using a .5 ohm coil which makes sense to want to do that. Valid reasons like that I can see being alright to build low but to do it just because you can is no reason to do it, also I check with an ohm meter, then recheck with another just to verify that the coil is not "Drifting" or "Shorting" before even firing the mod, again safety first above anything.
To the OP,
Props to you for having the gulls to post this, I'm sorry that more productive preventitve measures weren't offered as the replies as it would have helped a lot of folks try to catch the errors before they happen. Newbies don't know to look for tears in the wrapping, tears in the bottom cover and general battery safety or make up isn't highly discussed. Also I was hoping to have someone explain how to re-wrap a battery would be nice. I would say for you to have a battery bag would have been a good thing to have laying around, they are designed to contain the acid and toxic chemicals that are released (also the heat as well).
On to the ohm meter, seriously, ok...Yes I'll give you that some models are not as accurate as others, and the price you pay does reflect quality however these meters are used to test way more sensitive equipment then us as vapers will ever use. Even if it tells you nothing more then the MOD isn't dead shorted then this is what you would want to know at the minimum. Vape safe and vape happy, ensure that your equipment is up to working standards and you should be fine.
Everyone Else
Professional Vapors, really since when is this a profession and why wasn't I notified of it. At the most this is a hobby and that's stretching the truth a lot. The hard truth about all is its a device that delivers nic to help you get off the Analog Cigs, that's pretty much it. To classify something is to apply a label which then the FDA can slap more restrictions on.
No oHm Meter, seriously you think because you check twice that everything will be just fine, shorts happen and it does not have to be your coils, it can be internal parts or the insulator melted because of the sub ohming, it could a piece of wire bridged the positive and negative pin. To ignore the facts that this can happen is just insane and very unsafe, as I've mentioned in previous articles that we are the stewards of this community and we will be weighed, tried and judged by the FDA by our actions, all of our actions. Please don't let these be stories of unsafe practices and laziness as it will just compound the issues.
I can agree that OP didn't take safety in to account here, that the battery should be replaced sooner but in reality how many of you'll have tucked a battery in your pocket and ran with it, or didn't replace the wrapping on that old reliable cell that you've got. It would be a lot better for the new folks to have solutions then anything else as they will learn from our mistakes. Safety should be first and foremost before you even think about making that circuit, as mentioned before that 99% of issues can be prevented or eliminated with just a few min of work. Please invest in a battery box if you haven't already, this is some advice I've learned the hard way myself.
For those who are really not caring about safety and taking it as nothing important you've seen the damage that this can do, its not kept in secret or classified and understand that the media and various other opposing organizations are looking for this information. One incident can impact the whole community and if that is your intent then I'm sorry that it is. Be villigant in your checks and take safety as a serious matter because it is, I can't stress this enough.
Sub Ohm'ing is dangerous, there is no way to word it otherwise. Its not about venting of batteries but the lack of understanding the internal workings of MOD's in general and how resistors work (your coil is a resistor without the ceramic heat dissipater). Its not something "Cool" or "Awesome" to vent batteries and build dangerous mods, your not proving anything by risking your life building super low ohms. No one other then those who are part of the Sub Ohm clique really care that your running a .xx mod in truth. I don't know where the glamor in the sub ohm culture came from but eventually its going to get people hurt, this is something that I don't advocate at all so I personally can not support it. Now, the retract of the statement is if your doing it for a reason, a real honest reason then I can see it. I run .5 ohm, but this is due to the Sigelei box mod can achieve direct drive voltage at 100 watts using a .5 ohm coil which makes sense to want to do that. Valid reasons like that I can see being alright to build low but to do it just because you can is no reason to do it, also I check with an ohm meter, then recheck with another just to verify that the coil is not "Drifting" or "Shorting" before even firing the mod, again safety first above anything.