Bishop made a video about hana mod with dna40 inside it. What I noticed (maybe I am wrong), is that hana is raising temperature and when it reaches the limit you put on screen it stops functioning. If things are like this, dna has nothing to do with VIR. I can comment more only when I will have answers from Bish
so it doesnt keep the temperature on a specific level Bish? Temperature is rising and when it reaches the set point, the device stops functioning?
Yes Sir the temp rises then it stops when coils reach temp set. When firing the device depending how much juice is in it will always start at 200F and it will get as hot as you want do to watts you set as long it doesn't go past the temp you set as cut off. Also this feature can be disabled so user can vape without temp control at full 40 watts.
Based on your description Bish, I think that the main drawback of DNA 40 is that it does not sense/care about the state of the wick therefore it will keep burning at the set temp even if the wick is completely dry. Else, it would not burn the cotton. Is this correct?
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
@Imeo and @Bish, I think the DNA does not stop when max temp is reached. This is from the data sheet.
Temperature Protection: The heating coil reached the maximum allowed temperature during the puff. If this happens, the DNA 40 will continue to fire, but will not be able to provide the desired wattage.
Maybe Bish thinks it has stopped but actually it is still firing at very low watts like 1 watt. Bish keep looking at the screen when the cotton becomes dry, do you have a reading of current watts?
I checked the video and I saw what you say Bish. You fire the device and you vape. Temperature is raising and when it reaches the limit, it stops. That means that its a temperature limit device. It also means that you never vape on the temperature you put on screen. Screen shows only where it will stop and not the temperature you want to vape. Is this right?
I am just trying to figure out if VIR has anything to do with dna.
Ok now I understand what imeo is talking about. So the VIR you set a temp and you vape at that temp. You don't think of watts anymore. In DNA you set the watts and the maximum temp to stop (or to reduce watts I'm still believing the data sheet).
So yes they are not the same. Which one is better? I will try both for sure and let you know![]()
Ok now I understand what imeo is talking about. So the VIR you set a temp and you vape at that temp. You don't think of watts anymore. In DNA you set the watts and the maximum temp to stop (or to reduce watts I'm still believing the data sheet).
So yes they are not the same. Which one is better? I will try both for sure and let you know![]()