Somewhere, somebody wrote that the best or at least a good way of cleaning your atomizer was by blowing the juice out of the atomizer and then heat up the atomizer element momentarily to a cherry hot state, stop and repeat, then prime with a drop or two and install a new cartridge...
Well, i recently noticed something sticking thru one of the sides of the bridge on one of my attys, closer inspection with a magnifying glass showed some sort of long strands of fiber, so i extracted the ones that were sticking out with a pair of tweezers and to my surprise most of those fibers were burnt to a crisp, explaining the nasty chemical burnt flavor i would sometimes taste when juice ran low on the cart and at random times.
The atty in question is out of a joye 510, this is a 14X macro of the fibers:
This is the inside of the atty at 14X too, sorry for the depth of field but at 1 1/2 inches from the lenses and without a macro ring light is a bit tricky to get light inside the atty, the strands came out from the chamber under the bridge, where the heating element is:
This last image shows the actual size of the weird strands sitting next to the atomizer itself:
Has anyone seen this before? is like a wick of sorts, but could it be some sort of insulation as well? either way it would seem overheating the element is a bad idea, it seems to me like there's a capsule of ceramic or some material like it all around the element, but there's also this weird strands of material that resembles fiberglass, maybe they transfer the juice from the metal wick to the heating element? i have no clue but i figure i share.
Also note that i haven't modified any carts to use with this particular atty so whatever came out was put there at the factory.
If this has been discussed before and is popular knowledge, please disregard the thread and excuse the noob
Well, i recently noticed something sticking thru one of the sides of the bridge on one of my attys, closer inspection with a magnifying glass showed some sort of long strands of fiber, so i extracted the ones that were sticking out with a pair of tweezers and to my surprise most of those fibers were burnt to a crisp, explaining the nasty chemical burnt flavor i would sometimes taste when juice ran low on the cart and at random times.
The atty in question is out of a joye 510, this is a 14X macro of the fibers:

This is the inside of the atty at 14X too, sorry for the depth of field but at 1 1/2 inches from the lenses and without a macro ring light is a bit tricky to get light inside the atty, the strands came out from the chamber under the bridge, where the heating element is:

This last image shows the actual size of the weird strands sitting next to the atomizer itself:

Has anyone seen this before? is like a wick of sorts, but could it be some sort of insulation as well? either way it would seem overheating the element is a bad idea, it seems to me like there's a capsule of ceramic or some material like it all around the element, but there's also this weird strands of material that resembles fiberglass, maybe they transfer the juice from the metal wick to the heating element? i have no clue but i figure i share.
Also note that i haven't modified any carts to use with this particular atty so whatever came out was put there at the factory.
If this has been discussed before and is popular knowledge, please disregard the thread and excuse the noob