Lots of different answers. Lots of different people.
I started with the 808. I didn't want to try anything fancy or with super long battery life, I wanted to buy and electronic cigarette to help me quit smoking. The "mods" or "APV" as they are now referred to here (advanced personal vaporizer), did not appeal to me and if anything looked like more work. I wanted to quit smoking as painlessly as possible, and that didn't include a lot of battery maintenance. Charging an 808 I can handle, dealing with multiple batteries and big battery chargers, and dealing more with all that electrical/engineering jibberish - I didn't need in my darkest hours of tobacco. Don't get me wrong, I didn't base my decisions upon anyone's recommendations. I didn't know ECF or any other ecig forum existed. I call them electronic cigarettes because that's what the 808 is. Hell, I didn't even know the term "808" until I had to figure out the difference between it and a 510 when determining what brand/company I wanted to try. Both made to look like cigarettes. Two-piece or three-piece, no brainer for me. I just wanted to quit smoking.
I quit quickly, I didn't have faith in myself that it would be that easy or that fast. The electronic cigarette made it very easy on me. I had more than one battery, I had several, and I had a couple of chargers so I wasn't lacking for a charged battery in my transition to vaping.
I'm still here, because I'm still vaping. I just wanted to quit smoking, but found I like vaping. I like having the ritual still. After 39 years smoking, the lack of the ritual was probably what kept me from succeeding with other methods (patch, gum, cold turkey). I'm still using 808's. I like the Volts from Smokeless Image, I like a little variety and subtle "bling." I like their cartomizer flavors. They just came out with their own big battery in the last month or so - but the same, basically, and the Volt in the battery department, no multiple batteries with big chargers, but it is a very nice big battery. I use it, the X2, as well as my 808's. I still like my 808's. The new clearomizers for the X2 can be used on the Volts, and the cartomizers can be used on the X2. I see no need to switch from these styles in favor of bigger mods and more vapor and more power.
I recommend 808's to new persons, because most people just want to quit and get it over with. ECF is full of those of us who quit, but never moved on from vaping - at least not yet. Many will recommend the eGo or Kgo or even jump right into mods/APVs because they no longer believe anyone should start with such underpowered batteries like the 808's or anything that looks like a cigarette because they themselves no longer want to be associated with "cigarette." I can understand that, but with someone brand new to the idea of quitting smoking - and regardless of what the FDA or any of us here say - I'm going to recommend a device that I know works, and looks like a cigarette, 1) for familiarity, and 2) for ritual. After they've been in the arena for a bit, then their curiosity can take them to the "higher levels" of mods/APVs if they want to try them, but if they just wanted to quit smoking, then they had the least expensive and fastest track to do so. That's what my cousin wanted when I gave him an 808 kit. He wanted to stop, and then get away from any aids or devices all together. He didn't want to replace habit with hobby.
That's why I recommend 808's. I won't tell folks not to look at mods/APVs or "bigger and better" eGo's or whatever, but I won't recommend them to a person just starting who just wants to quit smoking. Until I know you better and what you want, I'm not going to make recommendations for liquids or other devices or accessories until you've declared yourself a vaper, and not just an ex-smoker. I've replaced one habit with another, albeit much healthier, but where you go from there is up to you to get curious and ask about, and not for me to push up front.
Just highlighted a few things that stood out to me. That doesn't mean I'm criticizing any of it (in the more negative of the meaning of the word), or saying that its "wrong". Your post just got me thinking about how incredibly complicated it can get when assisting someone who wants to eliminate smoking from their lives. The technical aspects of providing someone with a PV or PV's that will provide the "best" quality of vape that they can get is really the simple part. What is really complicated is the human psychology involved in arriving at a "form factor" that balances that "optimum" performance with the expressed desires, often inherently arrived at at least in part due to a limited amount of knowledge of this complex subject, and always involving a wide range of selection criteria that I have seen run the gamut from the keenly perspicacious to the mind-numbingly irrational.
I think that a huge wild card in this equation is the amount of mentoring you can give someone, and how hands-on and personal it is. I have about five friends now that have gone from Joyetech eGo tank systems directly to the most advanced of the VV APV's, fitted with DCT tanks and well-slotted, high resistance single coil cartos that give the kind of vaping experience that one might expect from such a setup. They have all had the advantage of being able to see, try, or hear about all of the available options in great detail, and I haven't come across anyone yet who insisted on having a ciggie look-alike in order to successfully quit. That said, I'll be getting some Volts in the very near future, and will definitely be offering them as a possible choice, the extent to which will depend on my own personal experience with them, which at the present time is zero. From what I've heard, they are very slick indeed, and I'm looking forward to having them in the arsenal of recommendations for those who really, really want to have that form factor as part of their gear.
So complicated, this whole thing, yet oddly relatively simple at the same time. Press a button, or not, which warms a coil or coils, which vaporizes some liquid, which you inhale.
And one real "Catch-22" of the whole process of helping someone choose gear is that what they think they want is often different from what they really do want, or at least might actually want in a relatively short time. The most striking example of that is probably the typically rapid reduction in the average number of daily hits that are tobacco-flavored as a vaping career evolves. Ask the typical beginner what flavors they would like, and you'll very likely hear "I want something that tastes just like a [major cigarette brand].
Then add to this whole mix something that appears to me to be a common among purchasers of anything, and that is an extreme aversion to acquiring something that is not the absolute best, end-all and be-all thing that they could possibly have chosen, accompanied by a tendency to devote borderline insane amounts of time analyzing and researching every last possible detail of every option for fear of "wasting" fifty or eighty bucks on something that, while maybe "just exactly right" for them, would very likely do the job just fine, and at the very least could be passed along/sold to a friend or acquaintance who would like to stop smoking and thinks that the device is the cat's meow.
To any beginners reading this: when in doubt, do
something.
There are so many fine, solid options out there, virtually none of which would be a significant waste of money. The more often you see them recommended, the smaller the chance that your money would indeed be wasted.
Some of the biggest no-brainers:
The Volt. Any Volt. Any color, any size battery, any flavor of cartridge, or get empty cartos and stick some juice in them yourself. Just do it. I have a boatload of PV's/APV's, and I still want a Volt because they are wicked cool, work great, have that slick little PCC (personal charging case?) thing that you can get for it, and they are just a must-have for anyone, IMO.
A "must-have"? Wow, that's pretty strong, you might say. Yes, a "must-have", if you give a sufficient crap about your fellow man. "Wow, again pretty strong", you might say. Yeah, maybe so, maybe not. But stop and consider how many people you know, or will encounter, who are desperate to stop smoking, and for whom a great-performing ciggie-look-alike like the Volt would do just fine for getting them immediately into vaping just as fast as you can hand it to them. "Here, push this button (or not), and inhale. Keep doing that, and if you like it, you can buy it off me". How much more simple can it get for someone?
Similarly, I just loaned out my Smoktech VMax yesterday, with a perfectly-slotted carto DCT tank filled with Tasty Vapor "Kretek" clove to a friend of mine who has never vaped in her life. "Just push the button and inhale". Nice intro to vaping, really. Please keep this in mind as a very valid rationale for just going ahead and buying
something that you see recommended repeatedly on this site or others. You won't go far wrong, and if it doesn't end up being a good fit for you, not even as part of the eventual array of PV's that you'll likely acquire in your vaping career, you can always just hang on to it and possibly save someone's life with it.
Ok, this is way too long. Wrapping it up; other no-brainers:
Joyetech eGo-C starter kit. Total no-brainer.
Or hell, a Joyetech twist for $29, a charger, and some cartos or a Joyetech eGo-C 3-piece atty kit for it. Bam.
Or a kGo kit and some cartos. Some juice, and you're done.
Feeling frisky? Know how to follow simple directions? A rebranded Lavatube kit. VV for $70.
VA Variable Volt Mod Version 1.5
Undecided? Well just close your eyes and pick one. Flip a coin. Ask your Magic 8-Ball. Just stop reading, stop over-analyzing, pick up the phone, and order any one of them.
Juice? Get a bunch of 10ml samples from any one of the vendors and flavors from this insanely long thread:
http://www.e-cigarette-forum.com/fo.../215923-what-flavor-you-vaping-right-now.html
590 opinions. Pick some that sound good and order them today. Can't try 'em if you don't order them. And they don't have to be perfect either. Do it, do it, do it. Less thinking, more vaping.