@5150sick
The crucial issue is: what temperature is the atomiser coil running at?
A regular atty runs at 60C - 70C. I've seen various anecdotal tests of RBA
coils run hot ('sub-ohm') and they are higher than this.
The fact that hotter coils produce higher quantities of unwanted materials is difficult to argue against given the various studies. I can understand if you want to argue this point, but you would need to produce (a) coil temperature measurements showing that the coil does not get hotter in inverse ratio to coil resistance reducing, and/or (b) some way of refuting the research that shows the higher the temperature goes the more likely it is that unwanted materials are produced in larger quantities.
What we need is a set of numbers for the temperatures of RBA coils run at various resistances / power levels; also research that quantifies toxicant generation vs coil temperature.
Note that thermal imaging temperature measurement cannot be used for this as the vapor masks the coil (it's been tried). Direct contact thermal probes are needed.
Our job
The general trend that we can see at ECF is that more people are vaping at lower coil resistances; and that this will expose them to more unwanted vapor materials. Alternatively (or maybe even in addition), they may pick up the worst possible usage modes from the previous mechmod era - stacked batts. Some may not be aware of any of this at all - especially newcomers to vaping - and some may be questioning the current fashions but not really knowing why extreme vaping may not be as safe as regular vaping.
It is our duty at ECF to ensure that people have the information they need. People can do what they like
when they have that information. Allowing beginners to be persuaded to use sealed metal tube stacked-batt mech rigs running 0.1 ohm coils without any indication whatsoever that this is not normal vaping or has significantly elevated risk may be OK in your eyes, but it's not where we are at. Ignoring this issue would be entirely wrong, for us.
p.s. Please also keep in mind that the situation is constantly changing. Nothing changes faster than vaping. What is true today probably won't be in a year's time. That's why our advice changes, and, hopefully, improves.
That is very clear to see in some of the cycles of our advice, for example the metal tubemod design advice in the previous mechmod era of 2010-11. We started with a very conservative bottom vent hole or blow-off endcap design, but by the end of the era we had moved to large gas vent slots as a result of better data. Advice changes, naturally, as better data becomes available.