Basically its just the wattage needed. You MAY get a "warmer" vape and some additional vapor production with the 0.3 ohm, but that likely would result in consuming more e-liquid and more battery drain.Is there any difference besides wattage needed? Wich one should i buy ? I'm using a eLeaf Ipower 80w 5000mAh with the Atlantis v2
Was thinking the same thing when I saw that. I wouldn't go higher than 20w myself on a 1 ohm coil.1.0 ohm at 40-50 watts? Thats gotta be an error. I can't imagine running a 1.0 ohm coil that high. That would blow your head off.
1.0 ohm at 40-50 watts? Thats gotta be an error. I can't imagine running a 1.0 ohm coil that high. That would blow your head off.
Wow, says right on the coil itself. Was thinking maybe there was different wire used, but they all have "W".I thought so too. I looked up the coils on Mister E Liquid and they had pics of each:
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Aspire Atlantis Replacement Coil V2
Whats the difference between 0.3 coil and 0.5?
Remember that these are actually suggestions.Coils Options and Wattage compatibility:
- 0.3ohm : 70W – 80W
- 0.5ohm : 20W – 30W
- 1.0ohm : 40W – 50W
Authentic Aspire Atlantis 2 V2 Sub-Ohm Clearomizer Tank
And this is why recommended wattages on these coils, from all brands, are typically useless. The correct wattage fit a coil is the one which gives you a satisfying comfortable vape without burning the coil out in two days. I will bet money there is no way that 0.5 ohm coil will vape well at 20W and that 1 ohm will burn out in no time, and probably taste crappy before then at 50W.
There's way too much focus on resistance alone. A 1 ohm coil can easily handle and require more power than a 0.5 ohm coil, for example if it uses the same gauge wire but double the wraps. I don't use tanks with pre-built coil heads so I have no personal experience of these, just saying that resistance isn't all that counts.1.0 ohm at 40-50 watts? Thats gotta be an error. I can't imagine running a 1.0 ohm coil that high. That would blow your head off.