Ash said:
HD, It looks like you're really onto something here. Can you answer a few really basic questions about your design?
1. Does the BT use a whip?
2. Since the heating chamber seems to be a test-tube with an opening on just one end, where is the air intake?
3. How does the BT perform with really big draws? I can see how this design could heat up the air in the tube when there's no air-flow, but does the heating coil really have enough output to sustain vaping temps during long draws?
Thanks.
Thank-you for your comments and questions. Answers here:
(1) Yes. The Bud Toaster uses a pyrex (borosilicate) test tube that is 1/2" diameter by 4" long.
i have also tried a 3/4" diameter by 6" long test tube -- i think i like the big tube better, but the last time i used one was many versions ago -- that tube got used as a pipe and got broken. i need to drill another one for this holiday week and try it again.
i say drill because there is no metal screen. i put a pattern of seven 0.75mm holes in the bottom of the whip test tube. This is a somewhat involved process that takes some setup so i do it sporadically -- cant just flip a switch.
(2) The bud is loaded into a flat bottom borosilicate vial that is inserted into the heating chamber (also borosilicate glass). The air flows between the two glass walls, into the bottom of the vial, through the bud to vaporize the THC, and up into the whip.
There is also a pattern of seven 0.75mm holes drilled in the bottom of the vial to allow air to enter through the bottom and draw out the open top.
Here is a picture of the vial where you can see the holes in the bottom:
There is only glass (and bud) in the airflow - no metal, ceramic or plastic in the Hippie Dickie Bud Toaster. EVER!
(3) The heater has no problem matching any volume of air flow -- that is because the batteries can deliver 120 amps of current as a surge, 70 amps continuous. The heater draws around 12 amps (0.5 ohm into 6vdc). So, a resounding YES, this heater can keep up with the thermal demand of a long draw.
i love these batteries - nothing else like them available right now.
In fact, i see the temperature rise as i take a toke -- note: this is an temperature control algorithm bug, but it demonstrates that the heater can meet demand.
After 7 years of using a "fixed" temperature design, where the temp would drop 50F with the first toke, and have to wait for the temp to recover, and then having it get heat saturated and become too hot, this computer controller is a revelation to me.
After 7 years of waiting 15 mintues for a "fixed" temperature design to reach vaping temperature, i have a heater that is at vape temperature in 40 seconds, with the first satisfying hit 120 seconds after power on.
So i say, fuck Ohm's Law -- it's a linear characterization in a decidedly non-linear world.
However the speed (and hence volume) of the draw is really dependent on the physics of the plant material -- there is a certain "residency time" that the hot air needs to be in contact with the trichomes to melt the waxy coating and expose the THC to the hot air flow -- then the vaporization can occur.
That is, i like a long slow draw, but i sometimes do fast puffs to test different styles and effects.
i like to watch a thick vapor streaming into the whip and i like to see the vapor when i exhale. That's what the Bud Toaster is designed to deliver -- what i like.
When i use the bigger whip tube, i can fill it with vapor and pass it to GF like a shooter. i like that, too. Next time i'm in glass procurement mode i may get some even larger tubes to test.