herbivore21
Well-Known Member
es·ca·la·tion
ˌeskəˈlāSH(ə)n/
noun
•an increase in the intensity or seriousness of something; an intensification.
Holy shit man! Although does make me wonder whether someone should just bite the bullet and move on to concentrate use
I kid, I'm not one to talk, sometimes we have to take one for the team and experiment I remember hitting two sublimators and a cloud on one rig in a similar way once.
I don't know, fella. On 4.1 my GH will consistently and evenly brown the herb. I'm sure on 5 that I could get it to be quite dard. That in your hand looks to still have lots of legs left (although pictures are often deceiving).
Cheers
A number of reasons could cause uneven cooking of the load for the relevant OP. Too fast of an inhale like was mentioned by another user may lead to uneven vaporization (uneven grind and not packing a very full load may effect this too). That looks like a small load too, enough to move about a lot in the chamber during vaporization.
A lot of vapes work very unevenly in vaporizing material that does not stay in the same place in the chamber during operation. It may help to stuff some SS wool (don't use organic fibres, this is a part of the chamber that's going to get too hot IMO) in the bottom of the chamber to fill it out and allow your load to be more efficiently (for the purpose of vaporization) packed. Vaporization should be much more even if the air passes through a single, even mass of herb which stays in the same even mass throughout vaporization - especially if you are inhaling super hard as well as packing a small load loose in the hopper.
I do also think it is worth discussing something else here:
I no longer seek dark brown AVB from flowers. I want light brown/yellow-ish AVB. I am looking to vaporize the resin glands on the flower, not the green plant material!
One thing I have noted is that if you put a load of flowers in the evo at 12 o'clock on the dial, you'll get huge clouds. As an aside, consider how much cooler and smoother this whitewall vapor is dry than the lowest temp whitewall vapor you'll get on the hopper lol (anyone who has used both vapes will appreciate this).
A look at the AVB from the abovementioned flowers used in the evo scenario described under high magnification (both before and after vaporization) will reveal that the AVB may still have small amounts of green plant material in it (although mostly pale brown/yellow and no visible green to the naked eye). However, resin glands are no longer present on the AVB, even under the highest of magnifications (higher than we normally use in macro shots of buds). Of course, one must still check this avb for residual resin content which may have melted into the plant material during vaporization and not been boiled back out again due to lower temps.
Short of putting the AVB on a column for proper analytics, one good way to test this is to apply moderate heat (useful rosin temps for example might be a good guide) to a generous amount of AVB, then attempt to press it by hand with as much force as you can onto a metal or glass surface (easier to clean if you make a mess lol). If the warm/hot AVB does not feel sticky at all after squishing hot granules on your skin with plenty of force, you have a reasonable cursory indication that very little or no resin is left. Even if you don't have access to high magnification methods to look at your AVB, this should give you some idea of how much resin is left in the AVB.
I would not use solvents to assess the remaining resin content in AVB since most solvents are going to pull stuff out that is not necessarily resin from material that has been exposed to such temps (anyone who knows how AVB solvent extracts look compared to even rig reclaim for example will have noticed a distinct difference in flavor and appearance!). Even the above heat/stickiness test is subject to this criticism to a much lesser extent.
This is of course advise for people who want to consume just the resin and avoid the harsh plant decomp byproducts. Anyone who wants to continue cooking their plant material beyond when the resin has boiled away is most welcome to do so