What settings

Status
Not open for further replies.

SimonQ

New Member
Feb 27, 2016
3
2
71
Dunfermline
Hi all, now before you all laugh i am new to this, I have bought new atomizers for my aspire Triton and on the side it says 25-30amp is this the setting i should use on my cool fire 4 as when i get near the end of the e-juice in the glass it goes a lot darker as though burnt. Hope i am not making a fool of myself :yawn: but its the simple things i get wrong :w00t: I am using 80vg 20pg juice is this correct or should i go to 50/50
 

Sir2fyablyNutz

ECF Guru
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Jan 22, 2015
12,126
16,654
67
West Virginia, USA
hi Simon. It wouldn't say amp, it should say watt...

The rule of thumb for ANY vape device you will ever own is the same. Start low power take a hit and bump the power up. If it starts to taste funny, gets too hot, or tastes burnt, back the power down.

The 25 to 30 is the recommended power in watts to use with the coil. It is a sort of guideline but not carved in stone. I would suggest starting at 20 watts and work your way up.

80/20 juice is high vg and very popular with sub ohm vape. Pg can add throat hit so most people use the higher vg in sub ohm and high power to give a smoother vape. if you aren't having any wick issues with the higher vg (VG is thicker than PG and therefore wicks slower) then use what you have. If you desire more throat hit then you go to a higher PG (up to 50/50) juice.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Romenov

suprtrkr

ECF Guru
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Jun 22, 2014
10,409
15,050
Cowtown, USA. Where the West begins.
The discoloration of the tank juice you are seeing comes from having a crud build-up on the coil wire and wick. It is not dangerous or harmful. What is actually happening is the sweetener in the juice is being caramelized at the coil from the heat. If it annoys you, change the coil and it will go away... until the next time. If the flavor and vapor production are still good on that coil, no harm is done in ignoring it. Personally, I view that as time to change wicks and burn my coils clean. I, however, build my coils, and I can reuse the coil wire and replace a wick for a penny or two. Buying prefab coils is more expensive. For me, I just vape the tank empty, disassemble it, pull out the old wicks and discard, then put the tank base back on the mod and fire the coils until the wires glow cherry red again and all the gunk burns off. Then I scrape the coil clean with my cotton hook to get the brunt carp (that's a fish) off; take the whole tank in pieces and wash it in hot, soapy water; let it dry; re-wick with a new piece of rayon; reassemble, fill and vape.

I am not certain-- I don't use prefab coils-- but it is probably possible for you to do something similar with your coils; pull the wick, burn it clean, wash it, re-wick and reuse. Many of the prefabs can be done like that and somebody built it from scratch somehow. I'm sure somebody will be along sooner or later who's tried it with Triton coils who can tell you how, or of it's worth the trouble.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Falconeer

Mrs.Vapor

Unresolved Status
Feb 29, 2016
0
53
34
  • Deleted by Misty
  • Reason: unregistered supplier

Romenov

Senior Member
ECF Veteran
Jan 22, 2016
267
130
41
The discoloration of the tank juice you are seeing comes from having a crud build-up on the coil wire and wick. It is not dangerous or harmful. What is actually happening is the sweetener in the juice is being caramelized at the coil from the heat. If it annoys you, change the coil and it will go away... until the next time. If the flavor and vapor production are still good on that coil, no harm is done in ignoring it. Personally, I view that as time to change wicks and burn my coils clean. I, however, build my coils, and I can reuse the coil wire and replace a wick for a penny or two. Buying prefab coils is more expensive. For me, I just vape the tank empty, disassemble it, pull out the old wicks and discard, then put the tank base back on the mod and fire the coils until the wires glow cherry red again and all the gunk burns off. Then I scrape the coil clean with my cotton hook to get the brunt carp (that's a fish) off; take the whole tank in pieces and wash it in hot, soapy water; let it dry; re-wick with a new piece of rayon; reassemble, fill and vape.

I am not certain-- I don't use prefab coils-- but it is probably possible for you to do something similar with your coils; pull the wick, burn it clean, wash it, re-wick and reuse. Many of the prefabs can be done like that and somebody built it from scratch somehow. I'm sure somebody will be along sooner or later who's tried it with Triton coils who can tell you how, or of it's worth the trouble.

very informative share! I don't clean my tanks so carefully every time, but from now I will, kinda joy of doing this!
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Users who are viewing this thread