Anyone found this happening besides me? I have a couple sativas that don't give much vapor until 410f or more and do not hit real hard but blows old hippy freaks' socks off when smoked. My Indica types seem to produce good vapor even at 385f. Temps approximate.
What about the other direction. I've found that Blue dream is a less then powerful strain when smoked. But you vaporize it and it's a whole different beast. My experiences is that It gives off never ending vapor. And the effects are awesome.
The way your talking @hillbill makes a little more sense in that if it's not a real "frosty" strain then you won't have those lower temp terp hits. IMO.
This is actually only half of the explanation IME (not to pick on you of course ).Are you talking huge vapor clouds that you visiblely can see? Huge vapor clouds that are big and visible isn't a sign of cannabis that has a lot of medicine. I've had shit weed that gave off huge visible vapor but didn't medicate worth a damn. For me you can't always depend on a name, it doesn't depend on Indica or Sativa IMO.
This can also occur due to wetness of the flower, if your flower is not completely dry (do the twigs snap, or twist?), it'll take some heat before it starts making clouds.This seems strain related as I only have 2 that are like that but it takes more heat to release their goodness. At lower temps there is no "pulling sensation" as when vaporization is happening. All and all, the amount of vapor released may be similar, the temp needed is not. Without approaching the upper limits of temp a person may think they have mids when they have an elite.
The c99 in particular when smoked backs people off who have been smoking even since the '70's. But vaping requires some punch to make her shine.
@herbivore21 amazing information! A bit herb-erotic also.This can also occur due to wetness of the flower, if your flower is not completely dry (do the twigs snap, or twist?), it'll take some heat before it starts making clouds.
Some varieties (strains is a term to classify viruses ) tend to produce more resin more quickly than others. A narrow leaf variety (what people call 'sativa', I've explained the problem with this terminology elsewhere on FC many times) will finish flowering much later than a broad leaf variety. The majority of resin production tends to take place in the final 2 weeks of maturation. What this means is that immature flower will have less resin, and will therefore create less vapor at low temps. It will create plenty of smoke of course, as would a piece of paper if you burned it. That is combustion related, not resin related.
At lower temps, there is absolutely a 'pulling sensation' with high resin containing flower. Look at your flower under a jeweller's loupe or similarly high magnification. Can you see abundant resin glands?
This is a flower at 300x, see those little clear/white balls on the end of stalks (which are also responsible for the blurred picture, as focus is hell with these little lens like balls)? Those are the resin glands. That is the part that gets you medicated/high/stoned/whatever you wanna call it, and it is these balls melting and boiling that produces huge clouds of vapor at low temps in my hypothetical evo example above.
You should not need high temperatures to get large hits off of high resin containing cannabis.
I have had a lot of different strains that will not vape well. Sometimes it's not cured enough. Sometimes it's the strain. I actually have stopped using any sativas as they tend to not vape as well and also seems to irritate my throat. I find I go through too much herb with them to get the level of medication I need. It's crazy how picky I am now compared to when I combusted. All the terpenes opens up a whole nother world. Some Strains I use to love to smoke, I hate to vape haha.