Was I just blinded by the hype?!

Status
Not open for further replies.

shortee611

Senior Member
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Jan 16, 2013
122
142
Aylmer, On
I also am sub 1 ohm coil on unoxidized mesh #500. The only thing I do to the mesh is give it a very light torch before rolling it. Just to take out the springiness and clean it. I just wrap the coil on the wick in the atty. I find that so much easier and more flavorful than the drill bit method. I made YouTube video a couple of weeks ago that shows my process.

500 Mesh wick and twisted 32awg coil - YouTube
 

vapdivrr

Vaping Master
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Jul 8, 2012
9,966
19,933
61
sarasota,fl

thrasher, if your refering to my post, what i am saying is that with the original example, he has a 2.1Ω coil and is vaping it at over 4volts and not getting the vapor. most will at this point increase the voltage, i think alot who vape a coil over 2 ohms will vape at way over 4 volts, probably closer to 5v. what i am saying is that more volts and thinner wire will not compare in flavor and thickness of vapor to a thicker gauge wire at 3.7v. in general hi res vaping is vaping at voltages upwards of 5volts, so i was just comparing hi res vaping to low res vaping. in his actual set-up, yes the volts in my example are not much lower, but the thickness of the wire and the lower resistance is what really makes the difference.
 

Quoiyaien

Super Member
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Oct 14, 2012
333
175
42
Beautiful BC
One thing about gennies that I never see talked about is performance robbing SOFT shorts. You will still have something that looks like a working coil, but for some reason the performance just isn't up to par.

A hard short will cause the coil to not light up at all after the short... but a soft short is much more subtle. You can see it in the way the coils light up. IME all the coils should be lit up the same and there should not be any bright or dark spots. The emphasis should be on all the coils lighting up EVENLY, at the same time.

Experienced genny users tend to know this, but for beginners it can be a PITA to finally get a coil lighting up only to have the performance lacking. So if all your coils are lit up, and you are just not happy with the vape, you could have a soft short on your hands.

Think of a hose... a soft short is like a leak causing a drop in pressure at the nozzle, whereas a hard short is a leak so big that nothing makes it past the leak let alone to the nozzle.
 

catalystRKS

Full Member
Verified Member
Oct 18, 2012
55
16
Jacksonville, FL
www.twitter.com
One thing about gennies that I never see talked about is performance robbing SOFT shorts. You will still have something that looks like a working coil, but for some reason the performance just isn't up to par.

A hard short will cause the coil to not light up at all after the short... but a soft short is much more subtle. You can see it in the way the coils light up. IME all the coils should be lit up the same and there should not be any bright or dark spots. The emphasis should be on all the coils lighting up EVENLY, at the same time.

Experienced genny users tend to know this, but for beginners it can be a PITA to finally get a coil lighting up only to have the performance lacking. So if all your coils are lit up, and you are just not happy with the vape, you could have a soft short on your hands.

Think of a hose... a soft short is like a leak causing a drop in pressure at the nozzle, whereas a hard short is a leak so big that nothing makes it past the leak let alone to the nozzle.

So, soft shorts are just remedied by nudging? Or is it my wick... or both... lol
 

Baditude

ECF Guru
ECF Veteran
Apr 8, 2012
30,394
73,076
71
Ridgeway, Ohio
I've had my AGA T2 for 3 weeks, but the majority of that time was an hour every other day. Within the last 4 days, after my second wick and third attempt with a coil, I've ended up with an incredibly satisfying vape. I'm using 30g wire and 500 mesh wick. The coil ohms at 2.0. Voltage is 4.2 volts. I do the Genesis tilt when I vape to insure adequate wicking. I am still laughing out loud at some of the clouds I'm exhaling on the Provari. Excellent flavor, smooth smooth vape.

I don't believe your lack of vapor is because of your Vamo. It is either your wick or your coil that is somehow lacking. Like me, you may need to tear down and start over multiple times to get to the right combination. It's truly worth it.

I was an exclusive cartank vapor. I haven't touched my tanks in over four days. Why would I want to?
_____

If you haven't seen the Zen video he did for Provape and the Provari, watch this all the way thru. I learned more from him in this than anything else in my research:

 
Last edited:

ukeman

PV Masher
Supporting Member
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Aug 22, 2010
7,718
5,129
Kauai, Hawaii
I made about 3 or 4 coils before I got into 28g wire, sub 1.0 Ohms, and a couple of times at least, I've popped a wire at the top coil trying to see if it would light up evenly (4/3 wrap)... even with the battery down to about 3.6v.
I'm always afraid to hold the button on first firing too long... in fact, a few times I've just soaked the coil with juice and just vaped a hot top wire coil just to see how it tasted and as long as the vape was pretty great, wth, I just kept it there.
(This is with a good hybrid or mechanical... lots of power.)

fwiw, In fact I ALWAYS tilt the device to make sure there's lots of juice at the coil or it will be bad... I don't rely on the capillary action of the wick..

One thing about gennies that I never see talked about is performance robbing SOFT shorts. You will still have something that looks like a working coil, but for some reason the performance just isn't up to par.

A hard short will cause the coil to not light up at all after the short... but a soft short is much more subtle. You can see it in the way the coils light up. IME all the coils should be lit up the same and there should not be any bright or dark spots. The emphasis should be on all the coils lighting up EVENLY, at the same time.

Experienced genny users tend to know this, but for beginners it can be a PITA to finally get a coil lighting up only to have the performance lacking. So if all your coils are lit up, and you are just not happy with the vape, you could have a soft short on your hands.

Think of a hose... a soft short is like a leak causing a drop in pressure at the nozzle, whereas a hard short is a leak so big that nothing makes it past the leak let alone to the nozzle.
 

jazon1

Ultra Member
ECF Veteran
Dec 16, 2012
1,662
1,075
Phoenix,AZ
keep in mind too that those huge clouds you see people blowing out in videos wouldn't look half as impressive in person not to say they are not huge clouds, people see in 3d and cams used in these videos record in 2d compressing semi transparent 3d objects into flat images taking away much of the transparency you would see if you were there making the clouds appear thicker then they really are.
also using VG and good lighting makes all the difference.
you'll make yourself broke trying to make clouds that look as thick as the do on cam,try and use your phones video and record one of your vapes and see how it looks you are probably already blowing some pretty good clouds.
 

ukeman

PV Masher
Supporting Member
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Aug 22, 2010
7,718
5,129
Kauai, Hawaii
Yeah, and I can get monster clouds comparable to most of my sub 1.0 Ohms Genesis mods with my Reo Grand and a 1.5 Ohm hybrid atomizer... usually a 60-70vg/40-30pg ratio.
Its just a different vape though... good on the Reo but best on the Geni .9 Ohms... flavor-wise

edit: eh... on second thought, not quite as monster as the Geni's at .9 Ohms... but good! :)
 
Last edited:

hausmouse

Super Member
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Feb 27, 2013
351
165
WNY
I've had my AGA T2 for 3 weeks, but the majority of that time was an hour every other day. Within the last 4 days, after my second wick and third attempt with a coil, I've ended up with an incredibly satisfying vape. I'm using 30g wire and 500 mesh wick. The coil ohms at 2.0. Voltage is 4.2 volts. I do the Genesis tilt when I vape to insure adequate wicking. I am still laughing out loud at some of the clouds I'm exhaling on the Provari. Excellent flavor, smooth smooth vape.

I don't believe your lack of vapor is because of your Vamo. It is either your wick or your coil that is somehow lacking. Like me, you may need to tear down and start over multiple times to get to the right combination. It's truly worth it.

I was an exclusive cartank vapor. I haven't touched my tanks in over four days. Why would I want to?
_____

If you haven't seen the Zen video he did for Provape and the Provari, watch this all the way thru. I learned more from him in this than anything else in my research:



Come on bad crank it up. Mine is 1.5 and I'm at 4.2 volts. I was at 4.8 on the last coil but got distracted, forgot the tilt and well you know the rest. The last wick was oxidized but I just did this one really light and the performance is leaps and bounds further than the fully oxidized. It was well worth pulling a good coil to try. It's the first time I really saw the light for gennies
 
Last edited:

vapdivrr

Vaping Master
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Jul 8, 2012
9,966
19,933
61
sarasota,fl
I was very opposed to it at first, but I'll gladly admit that I was very wrong, and LR setups on mechanical mods are the way to go. Even an Igo-L on a SmokTech Natural (less than $70 for the pair) vapes better than anything else I've tried thus far.

glad to hear it, now your half way there, ceramic brings you all the way.
 

Big Screen D

Ultra Member
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Aug 5, 2011
2,292
2,830
Georgia
One thing about gennies that I never see talked about is performance robbing SOFT shorts. You will still have something that looks like a working coil, but for some reason the performance just isn't up to par.

A hard short will cause the coil to not light up at all after the short... but a soft short is much more subtle. You can see it in the way the coils light up. IME all the coils should be lit up the same and there should not be any bright or dark spots. The emphasis should be on all the coils lighting up EVENLY, at the same time.

Experienced genny users tend to know this, but for beginners it can be a PITA to finally get a coil lighting up only to have the performance lacking. So if all your coils are lit up, and you are just not happy with the vape, you could have a soft short on your hands.

Think of a hose... a soft short is like a leak causing a drop in pressure at the nozzle, whereas a hard short is a leak so big that nothing makes it past the leak let alone to the nozzle.

That is a great point that many seem not to realize. Many also say that the wick making contact with the hole is of no concern. I disagree.

There is always some amount of current flow from the coil to the wick. Oxidizing the wick reduces greatly, but never completely prevents current flow from coil to the wick. Often times the dreaded hot spot at the top coil isn't because the top coil itself is shorted to the wick, but rather is the exit point for current that has passed to the grounded wick from one or more other points. Even if the coil is heating relatively evenly, some current is wasted reducing battery charge life. I've never tried an un-oxidized wick, but I'm sure that minimizing wick contact to ground is even more important.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Users who are viewing this thread