So here is a rough copy with adjustments to discuss (I have made 03 with a cone can, could it help?) Bearing in mind the arms been ugly but hey its a sketch
I like them in order, #1 the most, #3 the least.
Thanks!
This is purely a guess, but I think a lot of people like the 18mm female vs 14mm female because if you want an 18mm female to be 14mm you just use a reducer which doesn't add any height. However if you to change a 14mm female to an 18mm female your adapter adds an inch or two in height and some people may not like that extra height added?
That's pretty much my sentiment
Bend neck it is
#2>#3>#1
IMO.
Re: #1, I'm not the bigger fan of the offset neck, why not move it that little bit further and make it a bubbler mouthpiece at that point?
I didn't even think of that bit of the #2 neck being a splash guard, I just thought of it as an accent
Thanks for making these pics
@tennstrong that pyrology D-cycler is indeed a solid design and something worth consideration. I have heard many people who don't buy production designs say they would make an exception for that or the dimepiece.
Attention everyone interested in fab eggs! I have looked into it and it is for sure possible but not if you are going to be a cheap skate. They are not easy to make plain and simple. The real thing sell for a couple thousand and good imitations sell for upwards of 500. If we were to get them they would probably be over 100. How many people are willing to purchase one for between 100 and 200?
And please no one complain about the price because you can't find a decent egg for twice that
For anything over $100, I'd be expecting better QC...
Once it's over $100, it gets to a point (for me) where it's no longer "fuck it" money and it becomes "let's consider this purchase" money.
I recently got a planet rig in from Kathy that had 2 little cracks where the downstem meets the main can.
For a ~$20 rig, I don't really care, but for a $100+ rig, id be pissed.
I fully get that it's a more complicated piece, and the added price would just be a reflection of that, but personally, here's how I think about a (china) piece regarding it's price range:
$0-$50: so long as it's functional and I don't drink water I'm happy.
$50-$120: any cracks start to become unacceptable in this price range. Crooked percs, or slightly sloppy construction are acceptable, but annoying.
Bubbles are acceptable so long as the piece isn't riddled with them.
$120-$200: absolutely no chips or cracks are acceptable, bubbles are only really acceptable at a join or something, crooked percs/sloppy construction become less acceptable (but still ok if they're not too noticeable).
Not trying to say the construction will be anything but fine, just throwing it out there that as a customer my expectations go up as the price goes up.
I'm pretty sure for a lot of buyers $50 is the sweet spot where under that price, the purchase is a no-brainer, and anything over that is a considered purchase.
I'd be hesitant to drop over $150 on it, (less so if there was already reviews from a couple of members that showed good function and QC).
At $150+ I'd personally start strongly considering looking into one of the lower end American made eggs, I think I saw one gong for ~$300 the other day.
While that's still 2x the price, the value proposition becomes a lot more murky there.
What are the benefits of a fab egg as I've never used one I've seen them but idk what I'm looking for. I'd still be interested in it for that price range if the function is up to par. With all the pics n water tests goin on here I don't see why it wouldn't. Sorry for the noob question
My understanding of the functional benefit is that it'll act like a Swiss perc - because it's a hollow egg, there's less water volume, so the water can stack up higher and give more contact time.
Plus, they look badass