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Just sayin....
LOL
I actually said that to myself after I wrote my last post, but then i said, "I spent to much time to write this" plus, I did respond to a direct question that was asked.
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk HD
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Just sayin....
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Just sayin....
Not entirely accurate. With a boost regulator, like the Twist, you will not get better charge life. In fact, due to regulator efficiency losses, you will get worse battery life than a same size fixed volt. I covered this earlier, but I'll post the link again.Will it allow the user to achieve better battery life through higher voltage/higher resistance? Yes.
The opinions of a VV vs FV debate have little to do with the laws of electricity. Your make your point, we get it; You like VV. Your posts are starting to come off as a campaign more than an opinion. Let people make there own choices.
Now back on topic.
Not entirely accurate. With a boost regulator, like the Twist, you will not get better charge life. In fact, due to regulator efficiency losses, you will get worse battery life than a same size fixed volt. I covered this earlier, but I'll post the link again.
http://www.e-cigarette-forum.com/forum/modding-forum/315209-boost-all-bucked-up.html
Only way to get better battery life is with a multi-battery buck regulated mod, or lower your watts.
I really like where this thread went. I'm sitting here happy with my eGo-C Upgrade VV, but knowing I 'should' have another battery on hand.....I have been looking at just getting a 650mah eGo. Much more food for thought now that I have read through this.
John, your signature line led me to price an Antari and I about spit my coffee all over the screen....LOL!!! Hilarious!
I stand corrected. My apologies.Looks like the OP was happy with the answers she received and was interested in the discussion that followed.
John and Mroutlaw were both polite and offering interesting viewpoints.
So what's the problem with a conversation evolving from the original question?
And BTW I just ordered a Twist - gonna learn to love a #*%@ button if it kills me.![]()
Here is a safe vaping chart. This is to be used as a guide, not a law. The voltage is at the top of the chart. Since you have a Twist, you'll have some play in that. Along the left side, you'll see the resistance of the carto in ohms. The area in green is what you are looking for. That is the 'desired vaping area'. Hope this helps clear up some of the confusing in your mind. I know I was TOTALLY dumbfounded by this myself when I first started vaping!
Safe Vaping Power Chart | Flickr - Photo Sharing!
PBusardo bases battery life on his vape pace. I'm not knocking him, he does great work and I'm subscribed to his channel, but his method is hardly scientific. Using his methods as an example and then asking for extraordinary evidence for the sake of my credibility.....kinda makes me scratch my head in thought. He also says that he adjusts to taste, not to a set wattage. Since dual coils are notorious for a weaker vape than a single at the same wattage, he could have been running a higher wattage through the dual coil. Higher watts, less battery life.
It is not an extraordinary claim, it's the law. Formulas are in the literature cited in the thread. I'm really not concerned about proving myself to you, or anyone else for that matter. I am here to learn what I don't know and help with what I do know.
With that being said, I know electronic functions are not everyone's forte, so if anyone needs assistance understanding the functions involved, I would be glad to do so to the best of my ability.
Jp -
It has been my pleasure to help you get a good vape going. It has also been my pleasure to get about 20 people off of cigarettes, in part by spending about $3,000 of my own money so far, mostly on eGo Twists, Smoktech 3.5ml DCT tanks, Boge single coil stainless steel XL cartomizers, chargers, drip tips, trim rings, and juice. I've gotten maybe half of that back so far by getting reimbursed for just what I have spent. And more accurately, I usually give people more than what they actually reimburse me for. And sadly, I've been accused with great regularity of advocating vaping for profit, when my only goal has been to do what I can to slow down the cigarette-making machines that kill 443,000 people each year in the United States alone.
We lost 58,148 brave men and women in just in Vietnam. That is perhaps 5,000 deaths a year, in a (very long) shooting war. The death rate from cigarettes is 80 times higher than for our soldiers who fought the heavily-armed North Vietnamese Army and the Viet Cong.
I look at those cigarette machines as if they were machine guns killing 1,200 people a day; 50 people an hour; almost one every minute. And they will keep dying until the war is won.
In World War 2, we lost 416,800 servicemen and women, over a span of about four years. Compare that huge sacrifice to the 443,000 who die each year from smoking. How many Americans in total have died from tobacco? I wish I knew. It could be 20 million or more.
Those tobacco machines must be stopped, or at least slowed down.
The faster a new vaper starts vaping on something, the slower those machines run. Period. Every minute, every hour, every day, or every week you keep out of the fray while trying to find the "perfect" weapon means that those machines are not slowing down when you could be making them slow down.
That is why I advocate the Joyetech eGo-C Twist as much as I do. When Grimm Green and Phil Busardo say that they like it and use it, often in place of their "more advanced", "more powerful", "fuller-featured", or just plain "cooler" stuff, and say that they consider it a valuable addition to anyone's "arsenal" regardless of experience level, that tells me that it's a virtual no-brainer for anyone just starting out. It just does. Sorry.
I wrote this week or so ago, mostly out of frustration:
"If you just want to start vaping while you continue exploring the hundreds of batteries/PV's/APV's/VV AV's, tube mods, box mods, bottom feeders, drip atomizers, variable wattage devices, pass-throughs, cartridges, blank cartridges, pre-filled cartridges, cartomizers, XL cartomizers, XXL cartomizers, pre-punched cartomizers, slotted cartomizers, clearomizers, rebuildable atomizers, humungomizers, hi-res, standard-res, low-res atomizers/cartomizers, eGo Mega Dual Coil Cartomizers, the Bulli atomizer, 510 threads, 808 threads, 808-to-510 adapters, 510-510 extensions and what devices need them for what attachments, single coils, dual coils, triple coils, watts, amps, milliamps, mah (milliamp hours), volts, ohms, resistance as it relates to amp draw and battery life, pulse width modulation, buck/boost circuits, LED readouts and menus, IMR batteries, ICR batteries, drain rates, charging rates, battery safety, "protected"batteries, "unprotected" batteries", "ECF Compliance", multiple-battery chargers, cones, trim rings, J-Tanks, the MAP tank, Joyetech tank systems, Joyetech "C" vs. "T" and "A" tank vs "B" tank, "eGo" vs. Ego" vs. "kGo" vs. "Go-Go" vs. "WTF" .................
then you might want to consider what ******* just advised you to do. Get a couple of batteries, a charger (two would be better), a couple of boxes of Boge 2.0 or 3.0 ohm single coil XL cartomizers, a 510 drip tip, and some juice. Any juice.
If you want a tobacco flavor, get some "Virginia" and/or "Casablanca" from Backwoods Brew. If you want a non-tobacco flavor, get some "Root Beer" or "Peach" from Backwoods Brew.
Optional but highly recommended: one or two Vivi Nova tank/atomizers.
When the stuff comes, charge the batteries, put some juice into a carto, get the polyfill well-saturated, push the button, and vape.
Then explore other options as (and if) you feel the need to".
Please do not spend 200 hours analyzing every option out there before you start vaping on anything, like some poor woman on here said she did. In 200 hours, over 10,000 people die from smoking. Just start vaping on something. it doesn't have to be perfect; I think it's fine if it's merely very, very good, and something that you will very likely continue to use with some regularity regardless of what other gear you end up with. At the very, very least, you can give or sell it to someone else whose life neeeds saving.
THE EGO TWIST IS A GAME CHANGER - YouTube Grimm Green Twist Game changer
A PBusardo Review - eGo Twist - OvaleUSA - YouTube Phil Busardo Twist review
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jp - congratulations, and thanks for enlisting. It might just be my imagination, but I think I just heard a machine gun stop firing.
You said in that thread that "with a buck regulator, input current is equal to output current. So using high resistance, and therefore low current, is good for battery life".
There might be a few things going on here.
1) I might have just learned that any battery life gains that might be had by using a Twist with a higher-resistance coil at higher (than say 3.7) voltage might just be more than offset by the apparent fact that there is inherent inefficiency in the internals of the Twist as opposed to a more straightforward constant voltage device, and perhaps regardless of whether or not the CV device does or does not use PWM.
2) I think it remains true that regardless of inefficiency in buck and boost circuits, that a higher-resistance single coil on a Twist will give longer battery life than using a lower-resistance coil on a Twist, wattages being equal.
3) (Or maybe just a recap of 1) The inherent inefficiencies in buck and boost circuits might actually be high enough so that using, say, a 3 ohm single coil at a higher wattage on a Twist won't give you any more battery life than using, say, a 2.0 ohmsingle coil at a lower voltage (with both at the same wattage) on a constant-voltage battery.
I do not know enough yet to be 100% convinced that (3) is true, but I am certainly open to the notion that it is. I'm just not yet ready to put it into the "True" column.
"Since dual coils are notorious for a weaker vape than a single at the same wattage ..."
Agree 100%. I've often said that I think dual coils are a cruel hoax perpetrated on a largely unsuspecting vaping public. "Two must be better than one" is not always the case. If you can cook your dinner just as well on one burner as opposed to two, then do that, and save energy.
Lastly: "I'm not knocking him".
It seems that you kinda are.
You seem like a smart enough guy to realize that there are different acceptable levels of accuracy based on the task that you are performing. A deer hunter and a military sniper have 2 completely different acceptable levels of accuracy.
John, Let me first apoligize for being short. It would seem that today is a couple hours shorter than it should be.
Thanks for the kind words. My service is my pleasure, I take a lot of honor and pride in what I do. It doesn't hurt that I really enjoy it too.
Teaching is also a passion of mine and even though I have left the schoolhouse the beauty of my job is that teaching never ends, and neither does the learning. I've had to eat words on too many occasions. But, I've found that the knowledge gained in the process is worth the bad aftertaste. Case in point; the epiphany that I had in the boost is all bucked up thread.
No worries, no hard feeling, and there is nothing to forgive. You could imagine that after 10 years in the Corps, I've grown some very thick skin.![]()
"Your posts are starting to come off as a campaign more than an opinion. Let people make their own choices".
As I said, my posts are very much part of a campaign. (And I post largely so that people will have ample information on which to base a choice, like the information that there is a thing called variable voltage, and what I think its indisputable benefits are. If potential extended battery life turns out not to be one of them, there are plenty more that IMO make variable voltage a clearly superior option over fixed voltage).
The following describes the war in which I am conducting my campaign:
The part you are missing that has been pointed out by others is that while no one disputes the benefits of VV, are those benefits of any value to the average vapor? Some will say 'yes they are', and some will say 'um not really', and that's up to the individual to decide for them self.
I'll tell you for a fact that while I do enjoy my VV/VW mods, my little all mechanical Mako is a damn good vape, and in the end .. what matters .. besides being a damn good vape.
I thought this was about vaping not driving tanks XD