@Icon13 and as you can see by this picture my IMR battery has the plastic disc.
https://goo.gl/photos/xrPSkSQeteyRH5hm7
https://goo.gl/photos/xrPSkSQeteyRH5hm7
Unprotected batteries do not have that disc shape at the top, along with that defined Groove around the circumference of the positive end.
Ahem . . . . Not the ONLY thing. Don't forget the one thing that makes all this fun possible - I'm talking about the 3d printed heater inside your Grasshopper of course!but for the most part I enjoy it as my only 3D printed thing.
Whoa! Dude!How are you supposed to do a burn off? Do you just set it to max temp and inhale without anything in it?
@Icon13 and as you can see by this picture my IMR battery has the plastic disc.
https://goo.gl/photos/xrPSkSQeteyRH5hm7
Is an IMR chemistry battery used in ecigs considered a "standard lithium ion"?Actually, you should never use an unprotected STANDARD LITHIUM ION cell in an e-cigarette. It doesn't matter if the device has protection, the cell needs its own protection in case something happens internally. Yes the device can regulate how much current is drawn from the battery, but just in case something goes wrong with the battery itself, it needs an emergency shut-off mechanism.
You are correct about using protected cells with very low resistance atomizers. A protected cell might not provide enough juice required to operate with such low resistance and high current. That is why if you use an unprotected cell, you should use some sort of lithium manganese battery. Lithium-manganese batteries do not need protection because they are a very stable chemistry, and can safely provide High currents.
I was specifically talking about standard lithium ion. Lithium ion is not stable. As a matter of fact when shipping large quantities of standard lithium ion you have to fill out special paperwork and follow very specific procedures because the chemistry is relatively unstable compared to others.
Personally, I don't care what the e-cigarette guys do with their batteries because I used to work in the industry and I used to sell batteries to e-cigarette companies directly. I have seen/heard people use unprotected cells incorrectly and have their device blow up in their mouth. Shrapnel, dude. As a matter of fact, people that I used to work with have testified in court in such cases on behalf the company. Of course the fault will always fall on the end-user for being negligent and using unprotected cells in their e-cigarette.
Personally, I do not think GHL should be using standard lithium ion at all. PCB is known to fail too. It would have made much more sense to use a lithium manganese instead. They operate at a much higher amperage, have better capacity, more charge cycles, are a very safe chemistry, and do not require any type of protection. I believe that they are also more tolerant to temperature changes, but I'd have to second check that off the top of my head. Unfortunately, this chemistry is more expensive and would probably cost more than they would want to spend when you factor in their proprietary battery size. I hope they come out with a lithium manganese model at some point.
I think that confirms it, I'll be returning my Hopper to HL and buy one from Vapefiend (albeit with the v1 charger)
Is an IMR chemistry battery used in ecigs considered a "standard lithium ion"?
Which 20-30A batteries do you recommend for ecigs?
Every battery event I have heard of came from pulling too many amps from the battery, dead short caused by torn battery wraps, and dead short caused by batteries in pockets with keys/loose change. All user error IMHO.
I believe fuschia or purple to be more correct than pink as there's no green LED, though hot pink and fuschia are practically synonymous, so you know, no need for an argument therehot pink
I can't believe I forgot about my laser sintered hot air device!Such an ingenious design
The original design had all circuitry in the device (no brick on the cable) and didn't pivot (guided) when disconnecting (or connecting) which minimises any magnetic forces putting undue stress on the back end assembly.The v2 charger looks exactly like their original charger when they proposed the GH at $99
Did you send them all those hoppers and chargers and batteries? Was it 4 complete units? If not, how many chargers were replaced as bunk all at once?The Lab said I had bunk chargers.
I have a bad feeling about this
Used part of @DDave 's Milaana mod as a bubbler for the Grasshopper. Works way better than I thought it would.
That second hit...even though in the video it doesn't look like it...was absolutely ridiculous. It was thicker than smoke, more like an E-Cig type vapor, and had me hunched over for a bit. I was going to do way more hits...but that one...wow.
I would wait till the GH is dead.... and still do. It worked fine last night, first and second trial everything splendid, hour later I had the sensor damage police lights when starting. Pressed the button twice: normal heat up, normal function. Hopper Labs flow chart says when this happens "every start" it should be sent in. I'm not sure what to do as it's not showing this every time. Am I filing a warranty case right now or wait til it stops working at all? I kind of wish we'd never met... reminds me of that girl we all knew one time, the more you get to know her, the more totally unbearable features you discover, but there's this one thing, no one ever did and never will do, like she did. Okay.... apparently I'm way too attached to that thing...
At the risk of sending her in too early & getting a no fault foumd response, I would keep on keeping on and run her into the ground! Yeah bro, I'd wait until you're getting some sort of relatively consistent failure before filing that warranty requestAm I filing a warranty case right now or wait til it stops working at all?
It's the blue thing under the screen in the chamber. It's basically a bunch of screens stacked together with massive surface area for it's size *repeat after me: reddit is a useless source of information*Has anyone taken apart a hopper to have a look at the 3d printed heater?
(The herb chambers) have Stainless Steel walls and a permanent screen at the bottom, which is very heavy duty and will not need replacing. They have (now) added a (sic) additional screen to the chambers, so now there is added protection for the heater and permeant screen underneath.
The Grasshopper’s heater is influenced by nature, specifically a shell and this heater packs 36mm of heating pathways into 4mm of space with it’s spiral shell design.