What atty on what battery (ohm - mah - V) E2 carto ohm does not mach gen atty ohm..?

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Aalsen

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I have a genuine 510 kit, which ive learned that the atty has 2,2 ohm and battery is 3,7V 180mha.

I was looking at the E2 Cartomizer for the 510, and it has 2,5ohm - 2,8 ohm - 3,2 ohm. Those has higher ohm than the original 510 atty, wouldnt that make the cartomizer less hot then the original one?

I use liquids with most vg (80%vg - 100%vg) and the genuin 510 does not give a lot of th. I was thinking of trying a vaping machinge with about 5V, but where do i get that?

A low resistance atty for the regular battery on 510 would kill the battery in the end?

Could i just buy a low resistance battery (1,5ohm i think it is) and then buy a battery with more V and mha?

Ive red so much great about the E2 cartomizer and would like to try it, but the one with the closest ohm as my original atty is the E2 carto with 2,5 ohm? Are those cartos mainly for bigger batteries with higher Volts?
 

DaveP

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The Ego-T Tank is the current favorite among 510 family vapers. Taste and vapor are right up there with the mega cylinder atty without the mess of filler material.

You might want to try the Joye 510 low resistance atty at 1.5 ohms. LR gives you more vapor and taste. A LR atty needs a bigger battery to keep the batt life up between charges since 1.5 ohms draws more current from a standard 510 batt.

Ego batteries with LR attys are probably the best all around vape. That said, different juices perform differently on various atomizers. Experiment with what works best for you.
 

Aalsen

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I am looking at this now http://www.healthcabin.net/joye-abs...000ma-batterieslr-atomizers-product-7735.html
What Voltage does this battery give? For the LR attys the battery should not give more than 3,7 V.

If i go for a battery that gives more Volts, the atty would just have more ohm? Similar to this link i gave you, but just the other way around, that the battery gives less volt and the atty has less ohm?

I driptip, the liquid i vape is to thick so i just drip a couple of of drops right on the atty and vape. I can do this on this kit safely as well?
 

WomanOfHeart

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The eGo batteries are 3.4V and drop to 3.2V under load. If you're talking about going to a 5 or a 6V device, then yes, you'll need to use atties with higher Ohms. You can use a standard resistance atomizer at 5V. They run a little hot, but they work just fine.
If you want a stronger TH, you might also try adding more PG to your juice. Juices with high percentages of VG aren't going to give you a lot of TH.
 

DaveP

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Here's some good research on battery voltages:http://www.e-cigarette-forum.com/fo...ges-surprise.html?highlight=scottbee+surprise

Lithium ion batteries are designed to be charged to 4.2vdc. The Army found that they lasted much longer and took a charge more times if they were charged to 3.7-3.9vdc. The voltage regulator circuit in most ecigs controls the battery voltage to 3.2-3.4vdc so that you get a constant voltage (and constant vapor and taste) from fresh charge to almost empty.
 

Aalsen

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I have a little reaction to the pg, so i must go vg all the way :s

But if the ego mega batt 1000mah is 3,4V and the 510 180mah is 3,7V then the standard 510 battery would give a litte more th and vaporproduction on a standard atty?

The mega batt and the LR atty would be like (simulate) a higher voltage device, right? What kind of voltage would it simulate?

And what is best/safest and would last longest of a high voltage battery with a high resistance atomizer, and a regular battery (with more mah) and a low resistance atomizer?
I would thing the last option because the atty would get the same amount of power (ampere) throught it, the ohm is just regulated to mach the voltage it has to deal with form the battery, so the lifespan on it would be about the same? The last option has a less voltage battery with more mah and the lifespan on this i would thing would be longer, plus the battery would last longer after each charge.

Correct me if im wrong, this is what i think i have learned :)
 

hairball

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Answers are in red to the best I can tell you from experience.

I am looking at this now Joye Absolute eGo Kit for veteran(1000mA Batteries!LR Atomizers!) [Joye eGo] - $52.00 : Healthcabin Electronic Cigarettes - Wholesale and Retail
What Voltage does this battery give? For the LR attys the battery should not give more than 3,7 V.
3.2V underload. A true 3.7v mod, as an example, would be the Icon by Puresmoker.com.

If i go for a battery that gives more Volts, the atty would just have more ohm? Similar to this link i gave you, but just the other way around, that the battery gives less volt and the atty has less ohm?
If you go with 5v or above, you need to use HV atty's so that they can handle it. Yes, these are higher ohms. If the battery is weaker, like the eGo battery, use a standard ohm atty. LR atty's are not good to use on eGo batteries even though people do it. They weaken the life of your battery. The MOSFET switch can't handle the pull or heat from and LR atty.

I driptip, the liquid i vape is to thick so i just drip a couple of of drops right on the atty and vape. I can do this on this kit safely as well? YES
 

Aalsen

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If you go with 5v or above, you need to use HV atty's so that they can handle it. Yes, these are higher ohms. If the battery is weaker, like the eGo battery, use a standard ohm atty. LR atty's are not good to use on eGo batteries even though people do it. They weaken the life of your battery. The MOSFET switch can't handle the pull or heat from and LR atty.

If i was to use a standard ohm atty on the ego battery, i would not experience other than longer batterylife. Then i might as well charge my 510 batteries more often :p I was thinking of trying a modification, like a LR atty to get the atty more hot and simulate the hight voltage devices to get more and better vapor, and taste.

Great link DaveP! That really got me thinking too. If the standard 510 battery would give out actually 3,7V maybe i would not have this problem :p
 

AttyPops

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It helps to think of performance in terms of watts... like a light bulb. Voltage X voltage / resistance. The only catch is that some batteries (the real small ones... like in a standard 510 batt) can't put out a lot of electricity per second (amps). So they fail to perform like you want them to.

Standard (3.0 Ω) atties are fine at 5.0 volts. 5 x 5 / 3 = 8.33 watts. Above that, get HV atties.

Try for 7 or even 8 watts as a goal. As mentioned above.... it is suggested that you don't go below 2.0 ohms on an eGo, regardless of the calculation.
 
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Aalsen

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Feb 4, 2010
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It helps to think of performance in terms of watts... like a light bulb. Voltage X voltage / resistance. The only catch is that some batteries (the real small ones... like in a standard 510 batt) can't put out a lot of electricity per second (amps). So they fail to perform like you want them to.

Standard (3.0 Ω) atties are fine at 5.0 volts. 5 x 5 / 3 = 8.33 watts. Above that, get HV atties.

Try for 7 or even 8 watts as a goal. As mentioned above.... it is suggested that you don't go below 2.0 ohms on an eGo, regardless of the calculation.

I see. I measured my bat to 3,4V and my atty to 2,4 ohm = 4,8 watts. I shoult try some higher watts :)
 
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