If anyone thinks this should make a new topic for ARIZER SOLO 2014, October model, please PM me, and I do it, although it contains more like additional information to this thread.
ARIZER SOLO 2014, October model, minor contamination hazard and temp accuracy check
Although not "Miss October", but certainly worth a look, with the new arrival Arizer Air the good old Arizer Solo is probably prepared to leave the market with dignity, therefore with the final deals and price reductions you will also get the latest update in design, featuring no more exposed PCB in the heated area where air passing through.
Being one of the most well documented device it is truly hard to add anything valuable to the "Solopedia", so it never was my intention to review it again. However I made a shocking discovery, a vicious, ferociuos, malicious threat posing a tremendous amount of deadly risk causing death just by even talking about it!
Period.
Well, not quite. It is some minor contamination of solid bits. As a fact, that me, the paranoid vaper considering it minor, makes it even less minor of a hazard, well, if its in use, and your loaded stuff acts as a strainer. So cutting the story short:
After happily tearing off the lid of the packaging, I did contain myself, and started to do patient burn-offs, also gentle blowbacks. Wipe that smile. As I am working on a project creating a portable, cigar-like, convection-hybrid (!) type of a device to ingest
tobacco on the first place (close to same temps as most herb vaporizers) the 185C° was a very desirable temp for me to have accurately provided for my experiments.
You might throw up by imaging my favourite, vanilla-ginger infused Virginia dark tobacco to be used first in the brand new Arizer Solo, however I felt I was actually about to verify all that gibberish in "Instructions"
The experience was just as I expected, a nicotine rush almost popped my eyes, and flavors intense as it only connoisseurs can feel.
However, when I examined the vaped remnants, I made a strange discovery of
one tiny, shiny metallic flake sitting very obviously in extraneous environment. The very dark tobacco backdrop made it even more obtrusive, immediately turning me paranoid. The flake was definately not a chip of glass, under the magnifying glass it looked more metallic than Kerry King, than I concluded it must have been left over burr from manufacture, so I've done a good clean, than back to normal state of mind. BUT
! I remained concerned a bit, so just kept checking the vaped remains, and about a week or so later, IT WAS ATTACKING AGAIN
! This time I found one flake like before, and an even smaller, presumably from the same source, so that was it. I've lost Houston, and - because I could not find pictures of a disassembled model on the net - I disassembled my Solo, down to the very bits.
Under the heating chamber I found a white, ceramic disk, with both the thermistor, and the heating element embedded into the same body, tighten with a screw to the steel chamber, with another disk attached to its bottom, same disk was also resting loose in the hollow place where heating chamber sitting. Both of these disks were covered with a fine, metallic (or semimetallic mineral?) coating, both crafted on the edges to fit. Along the processed edges it was obvious how loose this coating is, just by touching it with my fingertip some easily came off. I imagined immediately this material as being imported from Pripyat, causing death, suffer, and death again on contact, so I started hastily removing it (although it probably has the purpose of heat deflection), and by doing so I just realized how silly I am, as I would probably never pull a draw from my vaporizer without anything in it, which would strain more than utterly any solid contamination.
When I calmed again, and was able to think, just to stay safe, I developed an idea of creating a fine, thin, sticky natural coating all over the area in question, so I've done those preferred blowbacks again - but with tobacco heated this time, and a vapor delivering resin backwards, sealing off such particles. I believe I am safe now, here is the video documenting the disassembly, and the test I conducted to see, how precisely the temperature control is set.
I have also learned, that the heat was maintained constantly, as opposed to a common practice, when the chamber is heated with a simple on/off duty cycle, with a rather large amplitude in temps.
Enjoy, if you are a tech-perv like me