KeroZen
Chronic vapaholic
Did they glow? What power were you running at? I keep telling you guys that you shouldn't use such thin wires. They are designed to work immersed in e-liquid, not dry burning in air. Many of you seem to also run in VW mode, so you have zero protection to prevent them from vaporizing.
To be honest, I'm a bit disappointed with what I see here. This vape is just a custom SS RDA with a special body compatible with standard stems. All this metal and machining can be have under $10 shipped from China (most often with glass parts, some coils and accessories, just do a "RDA" search on fasttech and browse over 140 pages of results...) and that's the retail price so I let you imagine how cheap it is to manufacture. Granted it's a custom design but to me it's a bit over-priced for what it is.
It doesn't even come with a special heater, these notch coils cost $2.60 shipped for a pack of 10 (ex: https://www.fasttech.com/products/0/10022204/8962700-316l-stainless-steel-notch-coil-wire-for-rba) and they are clearly not optimal for convection vaping. The StemPod should be shipped with custom coils at the very minimum.
I'm sorry but the Project costs under $50 shipped and is more efficient (can vape under 30W) Every-time I built a custom 510 attachment using a SS RDA as a base, it ended inefficient. Too much heatsinking, everything getting burning hot (hence the need to have a silicone sleeve here), mod getting hot by conduction too... Plus dual coil setups seem to take more time (or Watts) to heat-up compared to single ones. You often end up in the super low ohms range where the mod DC/DC converter struggles a lot, adding more inefficiency to the mix.
For sure, it's a demand vs supply equation and the two other commercial competitors are also very pricey, but at least they have a well-designed and tuned custom heater, and much more labor put into them. I don't count the Project as commercial, since it was more open source and a hobby to begin with.
I expected to see a collaboration with Ryan @ RBT to put his HSA heater inside a StemPod, that would be novel and interesting... but also probably less efficient than a Splinter and even less than a iHeat. At least it would be nearly unbreakable, and that's a selling point for a portable.
To be honest, I'm a bit disappointed with what I see here. This vape is just a custom SS RDA with a special body compatible with standard stems. All this metal and machining can be have under $10 shipped from China (most often with glass parts, some coils and accessories, just do a "RDA" search on fasttech and browse over 140 pages of results...) and that's the retail price so I let you imagine how cheap it is to manufacture. Granted it's a custom design but to me it's a bit over-priced for what it is.
It doesn't even come with a special heater, these notch coils cost $2.60 shipped for a pack of 10 (ex: https://www.fasttech.com/products/0/10022204/8962700-316l-stainless-steel-notch-coil-wire-for-rba) and they are clearly not optimal for convection vaping. The StemPod should be shipped with custom coils at the very minimum.
I'm sorry but the Project costs under $50 shipped and is more efficient (can vape under 30W) Every-time I built a custom 510 attachment using a SS RDA as a base, it ended inefficient. Too much heatsinking, everything getting burning hot (hence the need to have a silicone sleeve here), mod getting hot by conduction too... Plus dual coil setups seem to take more time (or Watts) to heat-up compared to single ones. You often end up in the super low ohms range where the mod DC/DC converter struggles a lot, adding more inefficiency to the mix.
For sure, it's a demand vs supply equation and the two other commercial competitors are also very pricey, but at least they have a well-designed and tuned custom heater, and much more labor put into them. I don't count the Project as commercial, since it was more open source and a hobby to begin with.
I expected to see a collaboration with Ryan @ RBT to put his HSA heater inside a StemPod, that would be novel and interesting... but also probably less efficient than a Splinter and even less than a iHeat. At least it would be nearly unbreakable, and that's a selling point for a portable.
Last edited: