Greetings and hallucinations to my fellow Arizer II aficionados. About a year ago, I purchased an Airizer Solo II to replace my Solo 1 after a battery replacement failed to bring that older model back to life.
Simultaneously, I bought an Airizer Air SE at a significantly lower price. Based on the sale price alone, I expected to see bigger clouds and better overall performance from the Airizer Solo II, but that did not turn out to be the case.
Even with the temperature of the Solo 2 dialed all the way to the maximum, I have never been able to get the cloud volume and density I expected from the Solo 2, given that I had been so pleased with the Airizer Solo 1 that I relied on exclusively until the battery failed after about 2 years of heavy use.
To my surprise, the far cheaper Airizer Air SE that I bought at the same time as the Solo II, consistently produced massive clouds of vapor that stood in stark contrast to the wispy clouds I obtained with identical stem densities to what I used with the Air SE. Assuming that there had to be a higher temperature setting obtainable by reading the manual for the Solo 2, I was taken aback to see that there is NO means to generate bigger clouds with the Solo II.
In short, the Airizer Solo 2's performance has proven to be inferior to the Solo 1 and to the Airizer Air SE, despite its costing quite a bit more than both of those models. If any users of the Solo II can offer ideas as to how I can see better clouds with this Solo 2, I'd be grateful for any tips that can be offered. I resorted to using my Airizer Air SE almost exclusively, to the extent that its oven is showing signs of corrosion now, while the Solo II sits virtually unused but for an occasional battery charge to keep it from dying altogether.