I've noticed a lot of people use only round wire builds as opposed to a clapton or fused clapton, just curious as to why the people who do, prefer it.
K.I.S.S. principle
I've noticed a lot of people use only round wire builds as opposed to a clapton or fused clapton, just curious as to why the people who do, prefer it.
I've noticed a lot of people use only round wire builds as opposed to a clapton or fused clapton, just curious as to why the people who do, prefer it.
Pretty involved but definitely interesting. I do think there are differences in the vape in terms of maximizing surface area and all that stuff, but I'm just not sure if they are really that noticeable. I mean if you compared a 2 strand parallel to a 3 strand parallel or a 3 strand to 4 strand and took a blind taste test if you really could tell the difference? Not sure, maybe?Here is an excellent thread that got moved and buried just as the discussion was getting started.
So you think you can design a coil?
I just wanted to stop smoking, and this is not a hobby for me. I have other things to do, so the least amount of time I can devote to it, the better.
Although I do change wicks every week or twice a week sometimes, the coil I'm using is eight months old now. I know I'll have to do something about that in the near future.
Hey, if the Kanthal in toasters and hair dryers last as long as they do, why would I rebuild a coil that's still working, just for the heck of it?
... but it's happening, and you're breathing it in...
...
Performance wise, it doesn't matter how many wires you use in parallel; what matters is the wire gauge.Pretty involved but definitely interesting. I do think there are differences in the vape in terms of maximizing surface area and all that stuff, but I'm just not sure if they are really that noticeable. I mean if you compared a 2 strand parallel to a 3 strand parallel or a 3 strand to 4 strand and took a blind taste test if you really could tell the difference? Not sure, maybe?
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I think it's all sounds good in theory but imo it probably barely detectable in vapor and flavor. If you had , let's say a triple parallel 32g at let's say 1 ohm vs a single 28g coil at 1 ohm, vs a 26g at 1 ohm , all on identical tanks with the same juice and didn't know which ones were which , I would say 99 percent of vapors couldn't tell the difference after taking one or two vapes from each. I agree that in the first example there is more wick coverage, I just think the differences are too minute to really tell. At least I can't tell, I have multiples of the same rta's and in some I have 26g, in others I have 28g, and at one time had claptons in an other, yes some had different resistances but I always ran them at basically the same wattages and they all tasted and vaped the samePerformance wise, it doesn't matter how many wires you use in parallel; what matters is the wire gauge.
Compare two coils of the same size (length and dia), using different gauges of wire and you will see a difference. The thinner wire coil will have a lot less mass with at least the same surface area. The main point to take away is the often heard statement "thick wire equals more surface area" is a myth. No scrap that; its plain wrong.
Why the triple parallel? If you build rather large coils with something like 32G Kanthal, you have to triple parallel to get a reasonable resistance. Otherwise you´ll end up with 2+ Ohms, which you cant fire at higher Watts due to the Voltage limitation of our mods.
Parallel builds also help with stability of the coil. Something like a 20 wrap 31G is finicky. 10 wrap parallel is a lot more stable.
I think I'd rather get a root canal then try to build any kind of parallel coil with a wire that started with a 3Performance wise, it doesn't matter how many wires you use in parallel; what matters is the wire gauge.
Compare two coils of the same size (length and dia), using different gauges of wire and you will see a difference. The thinner wire coil will have a lot less mass with at least the same surface area. The main point to take away is the often heard statement "thick wire equals more surface area" is a myth. No scrap that; its plain wrong.
Why the triple parallel? If you build rather large coils with something like 32G Kanthal, you have to triple parallel to get a reasonable resistance. Otherwise you´ll end up with 2+ Ohms, which you cant fire at higher Watts due to the Voltage limitation of our mods.
Parallel builds also help with stability of the coil. Something like a 20 wrap 31G is finicky. 10 wrap parallel is a lot more stable.
I think I'd rather get a root canal then try to build any kind of parallel coil with a wire that started with a 3