- Joined
- 10/12/13
- Posts
- 123
- Awards
- 9
- Age
- 38
Sorry for the late reply on this, updating my notification settings right away!
My current coil on my Tobh is sitting at 0.32Ohm
Right now the most topped up EFest 26650 Red I have is reading in at 4.13V installed in my Hades (not under load)
Under load on the mentioned coil in my Hades, voltage drops to 2.8V
So, yes - it's bad...I don't know why I never bothered to test this before
@M4dm0nk3y Thanks so much for the measurements! With a 0.32ohm build on a fresh battery (4.2V) you are aiming to see current of I = V/R = 4.2/0.32 = 13.125A.
From the above graph of the red efest 26650 batteries, graph from http://lygte-info.dk/review/batteries2012/Efest IMR26650 3000mAh (Red) 2014 UK.html , and working from somewhere around the 0,5Ah portion of the graph (battery might have lost a bit of capacity, not fully fully charged, etc) you're looking at getting a max of 3.55V out of it. Accounting for the battery having been put through quite a few cycles and we're looking at even worse performance, then of course there are losses from the mech mod itself as well as the tobh atty, etc and we start to see where numbers like 2.8V under load come from!
I also tested with my HCigar Nemesis, with a Sony VTC5 and the same atty and coil
4.16V: No load
3.36V: While firing (under load)
It would be interesting to see other people's results as well - I definitely need to do more research
I would put money on the higher voltage to atty measured here being mostly due to the much higher quality VTC5 battery and not mostly due to the different mod used.
The voltage drop for a Reo (has cold plated contacts) is around 0.2V.
@Andre , although it is repeated over and over by the vaping community, this "voltage drop" figure is actually only meaningful if quoted along with the specific battery used (as well as age/condition and resting voltage) and the ohm load being driven. I don't mean to offend anyone here, I just want to get the right info out there.
There is actually no such thing as a "voltage drop", all that is happening is that we can measure a drop in the voltage, which is caused by a current flowing through a resistance (mod/battery internal resistance/resistance through 510 connector etc), the only meaningful figures would be resistances of each part of the chain (battery, atty, coils, mod) but this is extremely hard to break down.
If it seems hard to accept that there is no meaning to "voltage drop" you can test it easily by taking your Reo, putting an atty with a low resistance (say 0.3 or 0.4ohm) on and measuring voltage while firing, then put an atty with a high resistance (say 1ohm or 2ohm) and measure voltage while firing again. You will see two totally different readings, hence no meaning to "voltage drop" without more information.