Hi Guys and Gals,
I am currently loving the eGo AIO devices, I carry 2 of them as my all day vape. I came across the rebuild-able coil for this device which is also compatible with the cubis apparently.
Have any of you been able to rebuild these for AIO successfully? I like to vape around the 1ohm range and when I rebuild for the AIO, there just seems to be waaaaayyyy too much airflow above the coil where the magic happens. Does anyone else have this issue? How have u corrected it?
I want the coil to perform like the normal store bought 1ohm coils which have a decent MTL draw but that seems impossible with these AIO/Cubis coils..
If you compare the store bought coil to the rebuilt one you will notice how "open" the top of the coil is which basically just lets the airflow do it's thing without much interaction with the vapor...
Any insight or advise will be greatly appreciated.
Disclaimer: I am by no means an expert on coil building but I am pretty sure I did it correctly (vertical and horizontal builds measured with a good old multimeter)
I am currently loving the eGo AIO devices, I carry 2 of them as my all day vape. I came across the rebuild-able coil for this device which is also compatible with the cubis apparently.
Have any of you been able to rebuild these for AIO successfully? I like to vape around the 1ohm range and when I rebuild for the AIO, there just seems to be waaaaayyyy too much airflow above the coil where the magic happens. Does anyone else have this issue? How have u corrected it?
I want the coil to perform like the normal store bought 1ohm coils which have a decent MTL draw but that seems impossible with these AIO/Cubis coils..
If you compare the store bought coil to the rebuilt one you will notice how "open" the top of the coil is which basically just lets the airflow do it's thing without much interaction with the vapor...
Any insight or advise will be greatly appreciated.
Disclaimer: I am by no means an expert on coil building but I am pretty sure I did it correctly (vertical and horizontal builds measured with a good old multimeter)