Vinman
Well-Known Member
I'm not sure if this topic has been covered, since I can't search for CBD ("search keywords too short") in the forum.
There was a recent study at http://www.biomedcentral.com/content/pdf/2050-6511-15-58.pdf titled "A protocol for the delivery of cannabidiol (CBD) and combined CBD and Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) by vaporisation" which compared vaporization of varying strengths of THC and CBD, alone and together.
It found that the combination of THC and CBD reduced the vaporization amount of each, compared to vaporizing separately (there is a nice chart).
It also found that vaporized CBD produced visibly dense vapors compared to THC, and that attempting to vaporize excessive amounts of CBD at one time results in "excessive resinous residue" left behind. I use separate vaporizers for high-THC and high-CBD strains, and my experience is that the vaporizer using high-CBD strains requires more frequent cleaning.
In any event, it seems from this study, that high-THC strains should not be mixed with high-CBD strains for vaping in the same bowl. Instead, separate bowls should be used for high-THC or high-CBD strains, and the high-CBD strains should have as little THC as possible, if you want to maximize the intake from each. That means the CBD strain should not be 1:1, rather at least 20:1.
Of course, if you don't want to bother wasting a little, then it doesn't matter, but it's nice to see research being done in this area.
There was a recent study at http://www.biomedcentral.com/content/pdf/2050-6511-15-58.pdf titled "A protocol for the delivery of cannabidiol (CBD) and combined CBD and Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) by vaporisation" which compared vaporization of varying strengths of THC and CBD, alone and together.
It found that the combination of THC and CBD reduced the vaporization amount of each, compared to vaporizing separately (there is a nice chart).
It also found that vaporized CBD produced visibly dense vapors compared to THC, and that attempting to vaporize excessive amounts of CBD at one time results in "excessive resinous residue" left behind. I use separate vaporizers for high-THC and high-CBD strains, and my experience is that the vaporizer using high-CBD strains requires more frequent cleaning.
In any event, it seems from this study, that high-THC strains should not be mixed with high-CBD strains for vaping in the same bowl. Instead, separate bowls should be used for high-THC or high-CBD strains, and the high-CBD strains should have as little THC as possible, if you want to maximize the intake from each. That means the CBD strain should not be 1:1, rather at least 20:1.
Of course, if you don't want to bother wasting a little, then it doesn't matter, but it's nice to see research being done in this area.