Now, I'm relatively new to mods, but something's been bothering me. There seems to be so much hype over sub-ohm coils, which in my opinion would only be useful when you have a mech mod with a direct connection to a 3.7v source (no major circuitry to worry about drawing too much current). But using a regulated power module to control your voltage seems to throw a wrench in that approach.
Take your 0.8 ohm coil and pass 3.7v through it and you're drawing 4.625A, that's well over the maximum of most cheap off the shelf power modules to deliver ~17w. Now assume you can find a 2A power module that can deliver up to 12v from a 3.7v in (there's plenty out there), just some quick math and you know you can max the thing out at 24w all within the spec of a cheap $5 module. The only caveat is you need a 6ohm coil. You can take this even further by raising the voltage and resistance, a lot of cheap step up regulators operate up to ~30v. I've never gotten into building coils myself, but I have to imagine getting super high resistance is possible (considering a 100w lightbulb's coil is ~144ohm).
My point is that it's much easier and cheaper to build a power supply running high voltage/low current than low voltage/high current, so what's keeping us from building high resistance coils to be powered with a relatively cheap high voltage step-up regulator? There must be something I'm missing.
Take your 0.8 ohm coil and pass 3.7v through it and you're drawing 4.625A, that's well over the maximum of most cheap off the shelf power modules to deliver ~17w. Now assume you can find a 2A power module that can deliver up to 12v from a 3.7v in (there's plenty out there), just some quick math and you know you can max the thing out at 24w all within the spec of a cheap $5 module. The only caveat is you need a 6ohm coil. You can take this even further by raising the voltage and resistance, a lot of cheap step up regulators operate up to ~30v. I've never gotten into building coils myself, but I have to imagine getting super high resistance is possible (considering a 100w lightbulb's coil is ~144ohm).
My point is that it's much easier and cheaper to build a power supply running high voltage/low current than low voltage/high current, so what's keeping us from building high resistance coils to be powered with a relatively cheap high voltage step-up regulator? There must be something I'm missing.