Welcome to, the home for vaping on reddit! Posting Guidelines:.This is an 18+ subreddit.As of 3/2018 absolutely no external links to vendors who sell liquid of any kind are permissible. This is per reddit site wide policy changes.Normal Gear and Handchecks - Are to be posted in the.Questions - Post your questions as either a text post or in the daily questions thread.Memes - should be posted to.ECR related - Submissions must be directly ECR-related.Reposts - Frequently reposted links/topics and low quality/title only threads may be removed.No hate speech - Zero tolerance policy on hate speech.No personal attacks on users - just don't be a dick and please try and keep things civil. Alt/Spoof Accounts with intent to harass other users will be banned. Inciting vote manipulation or harassment from other sites will also result in a ban.We advise that users PLEASE NOT purchase batteries/mods/coils etc from Amazon or eBay in the United States as it is against their TOS, and there is little recourse for the user/purchaser and the risks involved are not worth it.Posts that do not follow these rules will be removed.
Heaters are tied to the ends of the winding and conform to the shape of the coil end surfaces. Usually, one or more heaters are installed on each end of the stator winding. The following two pages show tables of typical temperature vs. Resistance of 100 platinum RTD’s. Section 7 Part 2 Page 6 of 15. Application Manual for NEMA Motors.
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As a pretext I've been on both sides of this divide. I started out with a nautilus mini and subsequently got a lemo 2. What I don't understand is what exactly is the difference between running a.5 ohm or a 1.5 ohm build provided you have the same wicking and are running them at the same wattage. From what I've gleaned sub ohm is better for higher wattages and tends to drain more juice, higher ohms are better for lower wattages and mouth to lung hits. Essentially, I don't understand why the resistance of a build matters if wattage (and all other things including number of wraps and the diameter of the coil) are held the same. For the purpose of my question I'm ignoring amp limits on batteries, I've just never heard a good explanation of why sub ohm and plus ohm vaping at the same wattage are different. When you are using a regulated device, resistance doesn't matter quite as much as when using a mech or unregulated device.
On a regulated device, regardless of what the resistance of the coil is, you pick a wattage setting and the mod will decide what voltage it needs to hit that wattage. In my experience a 0.5 ohm coil at 20w and a 1 ohm coil at 20w are pretty similar.One consideration is that ideally you want to stay below the output voltage of the batteries you are using so it can step down the voltage rather than step up. Stepping up is more inefficient so it will drain your battery faster. A 0.5 ohm coil at 40w will draw 5v, so if you are running a single 3.7v 18650, then that won't be as efficient as 0.3 ohms at 40w which only needs 3.5v which is easier for your battery to output.
On dual series 18650 devices this is less of a concern because you get a combined battery output voltage of 7.4v so a 0.5 coil can run up to about 100w and still not need to step up the batteries' voltage.With a mech, on the other hand, resistance is how you determine your wattage. Since there is not any voltage or wattage regulation, the only thing you can change is the resistance. So if you want 20w on a 3.7v 18650 mech, you can aim for about 0.7 ohms.
If you want 50w you want to be at about 0.3 ohms. Check if you want to play with the numbers.
Ignition Coil Resistance Test
Welcome to, the home for vaping on reddit! Posting Guidelines:.This is an 18+ subreddit.As of 3/2018 absolutely no external links to vendors who sell liquid of any kind are permissible. This is per reddit site wide policy changes.Normal Gear and Handchecks - Are to be posted in the.Questions - Post your questions as either a text post or in the daily questions thread.Memes - should be posted to.ECR related - Submissions must be directly ECR-related.Reposts - Frequently reposted links/topics and low quality/title only threads may be removed.No hate speech - Zero tolerance policy on hate speech.No personal attacks on users - just don't be a dick and please try and keep things civil.
Alt/Spoof Accounts with intent to harass other users will be banned. Inciting vote manipulation or harassment from other sites will also result in a ban.We advise that users PLEASE NOT purchase batteries/mods/coils etc from Amazon or eBay in the United States as it is against their TOS, and there is little recourse for the user/purchaser and the risks involved are not worth it.Posts that do not follow these rules will be removed. BATTERY SAFETYNote: Mooch315 asks kindly for anyone trying to contact him not to send chat requests.
If you wish to contact him send a private message instead.CONTESTS/GIVEAWAYSNEW USERS LOOK HEREVAPING ADVOCACYECR AROUND THE GLOBECOMMUNITIESGuidesDiscount CodesFILTERS. I put a.2 coil in and it won't go above 3.8 volts no matter the wattage, even 75 which my mod maxes out at.

I put a different.2 coil in and tried a different mod and battery and got the same result. Is that right?75W into a 0.2Ω coil is 3.8V. Ohm and his Law demand it. If you want to increase the voltage supplied to the coil, you'll need a mod capable of more than 75W.I've used.2 ohm coils before and it was never this weak a hit even at 60 or so watts.
Thanks in advanceI'm not familiar with the Cleito's coils. Maybe they just suck? Or they're duds? The recommended wattage for those is 55-70 (at least that's what is on MVS). I don't know. Good luck figuring this out.