KeroZen
Chronic vapaholic
I think @OF was talking more about the thread topic than your cube @Hippie Dickie. Your design is quite different and closer to say the Vapolution 2.
I think @OF was talking more about the thread topic than your cube @Hippie Dickie. Your design is quite different and closer to say the Vapolution 2.
but is it conduction if there is no physical contact between the herb and the heater?
From wiki
Thermal conduction is the transfer of heat (internal energy) by microscopic collisions of particles and movement of electrons within a body...Conduction: transfer of heat via direct contact
So the answer should be NOT, as you probably already know. the only way to transfer heat from a body to another body without contact is radiation and/or convection
Radiation is something entirely different since it involves photons. And is not a practical way to convey heat in most vapes since it needs a HUGE difference in temperature to be practical
okay, here is the fundamental fact: when herb is heated to a sufficiently high temperature, the thc is released as a vapor or aerosol - which i consider to be more-or-less equivalent, relative to the humidity of the gas.
so @OF, what you are describing is two types of conduction:
direct conduction, where the herb is in direct contact with the heater surface - like a PAX
indirect conduction, where the ambient air is drawn past the heater surface, and drags against it, and is heated to 400°F, and delivered to the herb. This would be the EVO or Glass Symphony, and Bud Toaster - i don't know about the Arizer design.
i find the temperature difference to be about 50°F, which is the difference i measure between the heater surface and the middle of the herb.
i'm confused by what you are saying about the car radiator - clearly, the coolant is removes heat by conduction, so when it moves into the radiator, the radiator is convection-ing the heat to the ambient, or is this also conduction. Or is that black box radiation, or both?
It's an example of a convection deal. Hot water is heated (by conduction again) and then pumped to a new location to be cooled bringing net heat with it. Making the radiator hot.
okay, replace "hot water" with "ambient air" and "radiator" with "herb" and that sounds like a convection vaporizer ... which is what the EVO, GS and Bud Toaster are doing.
Thank-you for your patience in explaining this topic ... it is fun to work through the science/engineering of vaporizers - mainly a terminology clarification.
and therefore doesn't contribute heating, but rather is an example of convection cooling.......
this contradicts the graphs presented in the beginning of this thread, and would make for a shitty vaporizer.
It should be 'heated air' though, right?
what those graphs show
It's not instrument error. I have used this equipment on many vaporizers and it is very consistent in the graphs/temp slopes that it produces. I posted the difference between conduction/hybid temp slopes earlier in the thread. I also have temp slopes for full convection devices if you'd like to see them, but it's not really relevant for this thread. Please stop blaming our equipment as it's nothing but a red herring.I understand we still disagree about what those graphs show but I still believe it's an instrumentation error as I said.
the graphs make sense to me, because it is measuring the temp in the middle of the herb, and the heat rises there when the hot air in drawn into the herb to release the vapor. between inhales, the temp in the middle of the herb drops back down to the radiant heat difference - about 50F, depending on the geometry. i've seen the same behavior - plus there is an air layer between the heater surface and the herb, which acts as an insulator, so the herb cools a bit.
I have tested several different gauge t/c's. The current one I'm using has leads of just 0.13mm. The entire 3 foot lead weighs a measly .67g. That's 0.002g per centimeter if I did my math correctly. I haven't measured it, but I've never found the leads to get warm/hot during testing, so I don't think there is anywhere near enough thermal mass to account for the kinds of temperature fluctuations that we are talking about here.And you are not alone in that. My 'take' is that the temperature drop is because of heat flow (again), in this case up the leads. When I did this same sort of test years back I also tried the same test with smaller gauge wire and got a smaller drop. I've said as much and encouraged others to make that test. AFAIK this hasn't happened?
It cooled off because the draw ended, so the convection stops, thus decreasing the temp at the load. The heat went into your lungs if you were doing it right.Why otherwise would the load cool off? Where did the heat go to between hits?
Edit: If the leads were really drawing that much heat from the load so as to make the graph drop in the dramatic fashion that we see post hit, then the same "anomaly" would appear when testing pure conduction vapes as well with the same equipment; and it most certainly does not happen with those.
Well, this inspired me to do another test using the original (thicker) t/c and my newfangled thin kapton t/c simultaneously.Did you get the same readings with thick and thin leads? I did not 'back when'.
What measurement do you get on the air temperature incoming through the vents with no load? I got very low readings........
TIA
OF
Here's the chart of an empty load at temp 7 with one draw.
In any case, thanks @OF for the suggestion. Intriguing stuff!
FWIW the signal doesn't really happen at the junction like most guys think (how could it, they're welded together.....) but rather up the leads as the temperature drop gets distributed.
I will try to run some of these tests later. Manipulating the exact location of the probes can be a bit challenging with my ET, but with the help of polyimide tape I should be able to manage something.@Stu - too many variables in your setup to be able to interpret what is going on in that graph ... do you have two of each type of thermocouple? suggested additional tests: both probes in the same location; swap the probe locations; both probes smashed against the wall; both probes in the middle of the load, radially located - which has to be done twice to swap the positions.
Can you elaborate on this? I'm not sure I understand at what point the temp should be dropping more. FWIW there wasn't really a "wall probe", just one that was slightly closer to the wall than the other.although if the leads are a heat sink, the temp of the wall probe should drop much more than it does in the graph - and continue to drop
Do you think the 0.010" (0.25mm) bare wire would provide better results than the polyimide sheathed 0.13mm wire that I'm already using? I'm certainly open to testing out whatever I can, so I'd be grateful to you for any help you can offer.i have a bunch of N-type thermocouples - bare junction, 0.010" wire - i could send you a couple. it should cover the heat range of interest. and maybe some 28ga polyimide tubing to insulate the leads, if you don't have any.
this doesn't seem right ... Wikipedia says the voltage is at the junction, not up the leads - the weld just makes the contact gas tight, but the wires are not alloyed together. usually copper is used to connect the junction wires to the control board for a long run.
Further testing can only lead to better understanding. The only thing that I know for certain is that the temp always rises during the draw - no matter the test scenario. This would not be happening if cool(er) air were entering the chamber during the hit as has been speculated.
Can you elaborate on this? I'm not sure I understand at what point the temp should be dropping more. FWIW there wasn't really a "wall probe", just one that was slightly closer to the wall than the other.
I think I can manage this. I'll report back.i would like to see the probe mashed against the wall - each different one, in the same spot, together and individually ... different spots on the wall may have different temps.
The thermometer I have won't work with those, unfortunately. It needs the plug that the K-type uses. Thanks for the offer anyway.can your thermocouple reader handle the n-type as well as k-type? the ones i have don't have a plug or anything - just bare thermocouple wire (6"). the 30awg wire provides faster response - don't know how much faster or if that is significant.