@ mad scientist - well said! Couldn't agree more!
Here is my basic understand of this thread....There are so many variables in today's attys (espicially rebuildables) that you can not simply rely on the same wattage to give you the same performance from one setup to another.
Did I miss the point of this thread?
Again with the f-ing semantics... The coil's temperature may not increase but that doesn't mean that there's a cap being put on the amount of heat being generated.
Same thing with boiling water in a pan... The temperature of the bottom of the pan may not exceed the boiling temp of the water, but I can sure as shti make the boil faster and more violently by turning the knob on my stove up to 9.
Talking a bout watts would make sense if we were all using the same wire gauge in our attys. At least in theory, applying 10 watts to a 1.5 ohm coil wrapped w 32 awg wire should be similar to 10 watts applied to a 2.5 ohm coil wrapped with 32 awg wire. So... If two people are using the exact same wire, they can talk in watts to make comparisons.
The point of this thread (at least what I take away from it...) is the fact that comparing watts is pointless if one person is using 36 awg wire and the other is using 28 awg wire. The wattage requirements between the two wires is so drastically different that comparing wattages is completely irrelevant.
@jasl - I would agree, if you only limit it to the coil. But IMO the coil is the easy part. Wick/liquid delivery has been the most inconsistent variable for me. I swear I could wrap the "same" coil on the "same" wick 10 times and likely there would be a slight variance across the 10 wicks. Maybe I'm just not consistent enough.
@jasl - I would agree, if you only limit it to the coil. But IMO the coil is the easy part. Wick/liquid delivery has been the most inconsistent variable for me. I swear I could wrap the "same" coil on the "same" wick 10 times and likely there would be a slight variance across the 10 wicks. Maybe I'm just not consistent enough.
Eh, you fell off the thought train again. At the same wattage there absolutely is a cap on the amount of heat being generated. Turning your stove up is increasing your power/wattage. Of course something will boil faster if you do that.
No... You're confusing heat and temperature... The the temperature may remain constant but the heat (energy) does not.
Watts don't boil water. Heat does. The only way to make the water boil faster is to apply more heat.
Just because there isn't an increase in temperature, doesn't mean that there isn't more heat energy being put into the system.
@ jasl - I agree with pretty much everything you just said, except for separating the topics. The more I seem to learn the more things seem to be intertwined. Optimization as individual pieces only takes things so far. I'm not saying separate discussions aren't warranted, just that to achieve overall efficiency you will likely have different "configurations" of the individual pieces than if you optimized them separately.
My apple cart is just fine... I've already acknowledged that the temp doesn't increase beyond the boiling temp of the liquid. You aren't making any new point here...you're stuck on the temperature plateau and it's upsetting your mental apple cart. In the boiling pan analogy, there IS an increase in temperature over time, as that is all measured below the phase change. Once the water starts boiling THEN temperature does not increase.
Here you are flat out wrong. If what you are saying we're true, wire gauge selection and resistance would have no impact assuming that all selections were able to reach the boiling point of the liquid.The same total heat energy is radiated from coils of different sizes at the same wattage. Given ideal thermal coupling, the transfer of heat energy into the pan would be similar between coils at the same wattage.
Here you are flat out wrong. If what you are saying we're true, wire gauge selection and resistance would have no impact assuming that all selections were able to reach the boiling point of the liquid.
Anyone who's build more than a single coil knows that is not the case. For a given power source, atty & wick... I can drastically alter the quality of my vape by simply changing wire gauge, resistance or both.
You guys are nuts....and I thought carburetors were a pita....but compared to the depth of this discussion I'll take the carburetor
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I don't mind getting a little bit in depth into physics behind things, but at the end of the day I'm a tune by ear and seat of the pants kind of person.
Tell you what, my latest dirt bike is fuel injected and it is so much better than a carbed bike in so many ways. I pretty much just get on it and it rips (well at least for a fat aging guy like me), but no fuss and great performance. I want a "fuel injected" equivalent PV and then I'll be happy![]()
I've seen enough of your stuff in the modding forums to know that if anybody can do it, it's you. Some beautiful work BTW!
No... You're confusing heat and temperature... The the temperature may remain constant but the heat (energy) does not.
Watts don't boil water. Heat does. The only way to make the water boil faster is to apply more heat.
Just because there isn't an increase in temperature, doesn't mean that there isn't more heat energy being put into the system.
Trying to follow this thread and I'm totally confused, are you guys talking about atomizers, coil wiring, wicking, stoves, carburetors or dirt bikes?
This is Watt (pun intended) this thread is about.
Two wires, 33g and 28g both 2ohm.
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33g at 4 watts, hot enough to vaporize juice.
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28g at 4 watts, not hot enough to vaporize juice.
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Hands down the best explanation given thus far!![]()
It should be possible to explain the laws of physics to a barmaid.
Albert Einstein
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Yep, the only exam I ever failed was over 50 years ago, the oral exam for for my flight instructor license. The question was "why does an airplane fly". As an Aero Eng I gave my answer, and the FAA inspector failed me because it was correct but too technical for a beginning student to understand. He took a sheet of paper, held it between his fingers so it formed an airfoil. When he blew air over the paper and it would rise. He said that is why an airplane flies. Needless to say I learned a lesson and passed on the second try.Funny... I actually had this quote in mind...
"If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough." ~ Albert Einstein
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