How about the net circuit TCR that the mod sees? Meaning to get the appropriate temperature set on the dial the TCR within the mod would need to be changed to match how a parallel coil circuit reacts.
This is a great way to say it.
Yup. I totally get it now. Sorry for being so thick-headed before.
So, a single wire at .17 ohms is going to get hotter (larger Heat Flux) than each individual coil of a dual .17 build -- energy input to the atty being the same between the two builds (which the mod sees as the same because the net resistance is the same).
Steam Engine is showing this to be true via its heat flux calculation (when comparing between dual and single builds with the same final resistance).
Where is that same wattage going between the two builds (single and dual)? It's being conserved, right?
So the dual coils, combined, if measured from a Flir, would still average to the same temp (or energy output) as the single coil?
Back to mod features to solve these challenges: it seems the "dual coil" setting that some mods have is an elegant solution, after all.
Custom TCR values would get the job, too. But, ironically, that's now seeming like the more kludgey solution (but one I'd rather have, as it's more flexible).
It would be nice to have custom TCR values AND a dual coil setting.
What's strange to me is that I'd expect this parallel "net TCR of the circuit change" problem (for mods that don't adjust for it) to be a much bigger accuracy issue than the inaccuracy of a single value TCR style mod, and yet, it doesn't seem to be.
Because in that test I did where I raised the base resistance, the RX200 got accurate again. Even with dual coils (and the mod not understanding the concept of dual coils).
So, it must be a more subtle thing? And by subtle I mean throwing temp off by maybe only 30 degrees max, or so?
In other words, what's the biggest problem to solve, the linear TCR problem, or the accounting for dual coils problem?
SCIENCE
