I have tryed to work my FF2 and I could not get anything out,It was as if the air was going though another part of the ff2 and it wood get real hot omost like something was blocking the air flow
As others before me have offered their support, I hope this helps. Try not to get discouraged. We'll help best we can with our input and suggestions. Hopefully we can get you tuned in, or at least know strongly that it should go back for repairs.
As
@NoCo970 mentioned above, air flow is key! What has riddled a good number of pages back there is lid issues. More specifically, the user really making sure they've got
a good seal before going in! Sometimes, when there's music playing or it's noisy I can mis-seat the top lid and not notice until a good 10 seconds in (I will elaborate on the noise affecting my usage shortly).
What's great about the FF2's simplicity is that I can tell relatively quick when the airflow is messed up. I'm gonna go out on a limb (there are others really great at trouble-shooting) and highlight two, overarching variables to have on lock before getting worried. I had trouble with consistency in the beginning--BUT, I had faith after having a couple good hits in between some really poor ones. [
Quick question that I hope you see: Have you ever achieved a successful pull from you FF2?]
1) material
-Dry v.s. moist
-
coarse grind (the more ground up my herb is, the faster it vaporizes and also less production on the back-end/ending hits of the bowl....plus, it creates a mess, effects air path, AHH. Coarse grind!
-Pack! -- more is better, IMO. But I only fill to the brim...at most I'll fill enough that when I tamp down with the lid it fits nice and level.
2) air flow
-for me, the most indicative "landmark" on the path to a good hit is a high-pitched
whistle that emits from the mouthpiece. Yes. A whistle. When I pull too softly, it might
barely whistle and I cannot sense hot air or vapor. When I pull too hard, I cannot hear the whistle anymore.
-You're looking for that
sweet spot. This can be felt, literally, via draw resistance. Long, slow draw. LSD. When there's too much ambient noise I obviously cannot hear the whistle. But like I said, when you're at the sweet spot, you achieve the right draw resistance (which is actually logical to me: the stronger the pull, the more goodies extracted from material) and you can feel whether you're getting that vapor or, well, just hot air.
-Also, you should be able to taste your vapor. I could also describe the vapor as being "heavier" when compared to just reg. ol' hot air with no goodies.
-With a good pack (of higher grade material), a clean mouthpiece and a great seal -- the only remaining variable is the draw. That's where the whistle comes in for me. If that seal is not great (believe me, very easy to not seat that magnetic lid
just right), you will get airflow. BUT IT WILL BE TOO MUCH. And there will be zero draw resistance. The air will move too quickly through and over your material and you will not properly heat your bowl at the desired temp. [NOTE: This also occurs when you have a good seal but your draw is much too strong and hard]. Therefore, simply re-seat your lid. Sometimes it takes me more than once, but best believe I do it because when I achieve that optimal draw resistance I get fantastic pulls.
-Going further, I also notice that when I'm drawing too hard, either a) the whistling fades away and I just hear the whoosh of my draw, or b) I'm getting a LOT of air and minimal vapor. You need just the right amount of air flow, passing over the heating element/coil, and through your materials. That's why everyone is recommending that long,
slow draw. Remember, at LEAST 10+ second draws. And really, I go until the green light turns off (auto=30 secs).
EDIT:
And as sticks points out below, check for clogged holes. With an empty bowl, switch to concentrate mood and activate the buttons...you should see the glowing red-orange behind each of the holes in the pattern once it's heated.
...chain?