Since my conversion to tanks, I've had to switch to manual batteries instead of autos. I find I am constantly deep-cycling my manual batteries, and this is why:
I am a chain vaper. After vaping for a few minutes, my batteries stop responding. I think maybe the battery is running low but as I haven't been using it that long, I try it again and it fires. Sometimes it doesn't fire twice, then works fine again for a whille. Is this a normal thing for manual batteries? (My autos do the same thing, every few puffs nothing happens, but I can tell when they are running low) Am I upsetting the batteries by puffing too frequently? Do either manual or auto batteries have some kind of limit for activating - am I tripping the cut-off?
I also find that using the tanks, the battery performance seems to have a shorter tail-off in performance than when using cartos on autos (is this my imagination?) so I haven't learned when they are running low.
I know deep-cycling batteries shortens their lives, so I'm hoping for hints/tips on how to know when they're running low.
I am a chain vaper. After vaping for a few minutes, my batteries stop responding. I think maybe the battery is running low but as I haven't been using it that long, I try it again and it fires. Sometimes it doesn't fire twice, then works fine again for a whille. Is this a normal thing for manual batteries? (My autos do the same thing, every few puffs nothing happens, but I can tell when they are running low) Am I upsetting the batteries by puffing too frequently? Do either manual or auto batteries have some kind of limit for activating - am I tripping the cut-off?
I also find that using the tanks, the battery performance seems to have a shorter tail-off in performance than when using cartos on autos (is this my imagination?) so I haven't learned when they are running low.
I know deep-cycling batteries shortens their lives, so I'm hoping for hints/tips on how to know when they're running low.