Salty said:
I guess my reasoning for warming it at 300F and vaping at 500F is in case I take longer than normal to hit it. I fear that leaving it at a higher temp for an extended amount of time will cause damage. I dont know why, I guess its just paranoia or me not fully understanding the concept. I will try your method tonight.
Also, I'm aware that vapor is significantly lighter than smoke. The issue I'm having is I see no vapor at all at lower than 500F temps. I'm still learning and experimenting, so I'm sure I'll find my sweet spot soon. Thanks for your advice SmokeNoMore.
So I just picked up a second hand Extreme Q off of ebay, but most of the parts were still wrapped so it appears pretty close to brand new. I'm starting to think however that the reason the dude sold it (at my crazy lowball offer price) was that it doesn't get nearly hot enough. I'm letting it sit at 260C (500F) for 20 minutes and while I am getting a nice subtle buzz, it's barely turning a light brown, mostly green still, after a number of hauls.
I can't help but think this might be something as simple as the temp sensor being too close to the core of the heat source. As far as I can tell from reading through reviews and this forum, there's gotta be some sort of fudge-factor for the temperature readings at the core of the heating element. It likely would like need to be substantially hotter than 200C to get the product to that temp.
So I'm thinking if I can force a lower reading from that sensor, it should allow the feedback system to settle on a higher "real" temperature. Does anyone here have any experience moving the temp sensors? Or perhaps plopping a resistor on the sensor leads to drop the temp reading? I haven't tried opening it up yet.
I'm guessing the warranty doesn't transfer on second-hand units.
Thanks!
PMS