Pinball-Vapes
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Here is some concept art I cooked up last night for what I'd like to see in a duel 25mm coil hot hole for a wireless Screwball / quartz labware combo.
You'll want a PID controller that is wired in the D-Nail/Auber style and that uses an XLR connector. Unfortunately mininail is not compatible.Anyone have a good pid recommendation?
I’ve been looking at the one from Auber and Cannabis Hardware. Would mininail work?
It's meant to emulate a cold start dab: low temp to start for flavor, etc. It just swaps between two temperatures with a single click.Have you used the boost feature with the screwball? How well does that work?
I like my CH PID And DC PIDs.I just ordered a SB as my first foray into ball vapes.
I researched for a while and finally went with it but missed out on a pid.
Anyone have a good pid recommendation?
I’ve been looking at the one from Auber and Cannabis Hardware. Would mininail work?
I don’t have an enail setup so a whole kit would be nice.
I’m just looking for some suggestions of where to look. I’m excited.
Couldn't agree more both on how well tuned this thing is and the exceptional balance of build quality and cost. The efficiency at low temps and resulting flavor are remarkable and I imagine its big-hit capacity is unmatched. I think for the average ball-vaper this thing really sits in a sweet spot.Also just got my Screwball, and appreciating the seriously good design and quality of manufacture. I have to say I think my B2 is looking very unloved and sad, now the new child is getting all the well deserved attention. And that scoop! I'm in love with a scoop, ffs! (just check the original price too - no customer gouging there like some $50 scoops!)
Regards the question of using SiC instead of Ti for the head, one thing I've noticed in the SB is the extremely fast movement of heat from the more powerful coil to the ruby, such that I don't see any drift on the temperature from the rubies continuing to soak heat despite the Pid showing above the set temperature, which I experience on other 100W 20mm coil devices. On the SB this doesn't seem to happen, it's fast to heat up, and fast to settle at equilibrium, there's almost no detectable lag in response.
I believe this is mostly due to the higher capacity heating element (Cal's "First Idea"?), but also the thin and conductive titanium wall of the heater married to the gem shape and small size of the ruby. While SiC may have a higher heat capacity, that doesn't mean that heat can flow into and out of the material as fast as some other materials, like titanium. Also allowing for the shape and distribution of the capacitor material as well as it's specific heat capacity and conductance. Without that fast flow of heat, a less conductive material will take longer to come into equilibrium with the coil. Then as pointed out, the cost has a big impact, and I'd guess any improvement would not be worth the extra cost (development and materials). Vapvana seem to have achieved a very good balance in where the money goes, and making the most of that value in the quality of product. To make a high-end device at an entry-level cost, and then go in the direction of the obscure, rare and costly, may not work well with that paradigm even if it technically works.
Also, I suspect the gems have a better contact area between each other and their Ti container. Balls will always only have a tiny contact area because every part of the surface is convex, while the gems are made of small flat facets that can sometimes make a higher area of contact with a neighbour or wall, plus the fact there are so many more of them makes the probability of better contact for each one higher - essentially giving a network of higher capacity routes for the heat to penetrate to the middle of the head allowing faster heatup times. Not dissimilar to poking holes into a spud before baking, so the heat from the oven can penetrate the middle of the potato much quicker.
Sadly, changing even just one factor by a seemingly small degree, can make differences not originally accounted for - hence the need for experimentation. Though experimentation comes from having these ideas in the first place, it has to be said!
Cool designs Glenn, but is the positioning of the coils toward the back going to make it harder to pick up and return the heads?
Here is some concept art I cooked up last night for what I'd like to see in a duel 25mm coil hot hole for a wireless Screwball / quartz labware combo.
Well I dunno if anyone's talked about this side of it here, but the higher the temperature, the more degradation of the terpenes in particular. These can break down to very simple basic components like three-carbon chains that then recombine to form, among other things, chemicals like benzene, a known carcinogenic toxin, and when, say, running dab's at very high temps, there's maybe a 50+ fold increase in benzene from that already in the air! Benzene isn't the only thing either, but as an example is mostly known about as a nasty substance to be deliberately inhaling!Couldn't agree more both on how well tuned this thing is and the exceptional balance of build quality and cost. The efficiency at low temps and resulting flavor are remarkable and I imagine its big-hit capacity is unmatched. I think for the average ball-vaper this thing really sits in a sweet spot.
What are you using to measure the temperature of the rubies?I don't see any drift on the temperature from the rubies continuing to soak heat despite the Pid showing above the set temperature
Nothing what so ever!What are you using to measure the temperature of the rubies?
Just a thought, but I used to work in wet chemistry labs, and we used a few different types of grease especially for Quickfit™ glass joints (glass to glass only, not suitable for the SB bowl) to prevent sticking. Some were silicon based, just a clear thick gel, and designed for high vacuum seals - others that wouldn't dry up and cause a seizure, wouldn't boil or out-gas etc. in a reaction vessel. i.e. a good few types and uses.I wish TAG was a bit more consistent, my current TAG downstem sticks every time. A little coconut oil and a twist keeps it reasonably easy to remove for a day or so.
I think what you are describing is the fact that the Vapvana PID controller doesn't do real time updates. The set temperature is not changed once it is reached. You can demonstrate this quite easily by cooling the thermocouple (at the tip of the coil). You will see no temperature drop. However you can measure, even with an IR temperature gun that the coil is cooled and then heats rapidly.All the Pid display gives, which is all I have, is a relative number against which we can make comparisons with previous runs, and to a slightly lesser degree, with others using same kit.
Oh I quite agree! Not to mention the fact I'm pretty new to the game so lots I don't know yet. And that's going to be a comparison, but I want to get to know the thing with it's supplied controller first, as much because I have no idea if it's tuned to the 200W coil or not. In fact, now I have you (er, so to speak!), maybe you can answer that question? I've a CH unit, will that plug and play with the SB head, or would it need calibrating or some other operation to work?I think what you are describing is the fact that the Vapvana PID controller doesn't do real time updates. The set temperature is not changed once it is reached. You can demonstrate this quite easily by cooling the thermocouple (at the tip of the coil). You will see no temperature drop. However you can measure, even with an IR temperature gun that the coil is cooled and then heats rapidly.
I suspect if you want an apples-to-apples comparison on thermal stability, you would at least want to use the same controller as your other ball vapes.
If it is the CH/NV controller you'll want to auto tune it after you plug in the Screwball. If you have an Auber, it is a manual setting.I've a CH unit, will that plug and play with the SB head, or would it need calibrating or some other operation to work?
Nice one! Thanks, that's good to know (and I'm glad I was too impulsive! ;o)).If it is the CH/NV controller you'll want to auto tune it after you plug in the Screwball. If you have an Auber, it is a manual setting.
My first controller (Qaroma) came default with the “real time” readout if you will. I would set to 550 and it would take a couple minutes to get there, then go past usually by 10 degrees. From there it would descend and stabilize, ready in 7-8 minutes from start. It would drop as well during/after a pull, but climb fairly quick back up. Found I really didn’t need to wait until it came back to my set temp to use again. Rubies, heater, bowl were already hot enough.Nice one! Thanks, that's good to know (and I'm glad I was too impulsive! ;o)).
Once I'm a bit more at home with the SB I'll play around on the CH Pid and see what the difference is like. Also, this likely explains why it seem SO good at retaining the heat, I'll have to try waiting a little longer before using and see the difference. But the real fast heat up must mean that heat is soaking in fast, unless the difference that extra coil and wattage makes is even more than I'd expect.
Sorry people:Nice one! Thanks, that's good to know (and I'm glad I was too impulsive! ;o)).
Once I'm a bit more at home with the SB I'll play around on the CH Pid and see what the difference is like. Also, this likely explains why it seem SO good at retaining the heat, I'll have to try waiting a little longer before using and see the difference. But the real fast heat up must mean that heat is soaking in fast, unless the difference that extra coil and wattage makes is even more than I'd expect.
That sounds very similar to what I experience with the CH B2 and CH's pid (the cheaper one without the dial), which is why I was so surprised to see the remarkable difference, but maybe made the mistake of assuming the SB's pid's readout would have a similar sensitivity, I should have thought it through BEFORE trying the blessed thing out? :^DMy first controller (Qaroma) came default with the “real time” readout if you will. I would set to 550 and it would take a couple minutes to get there, then go past usually by 10 degrees. From there it would descend and stabilize, ready in 7-8 minutes from start. It would drop as well during/after a pull, but climb fairly quick back up. Found I really didn’t need to wait until it came back to my set temp to use again. Rubies, heater, bowl were already hot enough.
Sounds like the deadzone/deadband setting is enabled. High Five does that with their LDC controller, too - annoying as hell! When the active temperature reading is within XX degrees of the Set/Target temperature, the display will only display the Set temp. There's probably a setting in the service menu to disable that / set it to 0.I think what you are describing is the fact that the Vapvana PID controller doesn't do real time updates. The set temperature is not changed once it is reached. You can demonstrate this quite easily by cooling the thermocouple (at the tip of the coil). You will see no temperature drop. However you can measure, even with an IR temperature gun that the coil is cooled and then heats rapidly.
I suspect if you want an apples-to-apples comparison on thermal stability, you would at least want to use the same controller as your other ball vapes.
(if I am understanding correctly)Sounds like the deadzone/deadband setting is enabled. High Five does that with their LDC controller, too - annoying as hell! When the active temperature reading is within XX degrees of the Set/Target temperature, the display will only display the Set temp. There's probably a setting in the service menu to disable that / set it to 0.
The temperature probe in the SB's coil is down past the ball chamber over the thin wall that extends down over the bowl. I'd expect to see the temp drop quite a bit more than the B0 as a result of that since the bowl will immediately start leeching heat from those thin walls with no balls to buffer the heat transfer. That loss should show up quickly on the coil. Same story with the T360 (likely an even larger drop in the coil temp) and my own tethered Steamroller heads. I've seen as much as a 35-degree drop in the coil with the Steamroller, with barely any change within the actual ball chamber.
Now that's interesting! Because with a little experimentation last night, I found on turning down the temp by 10 degree's (I work in ℉ for a slightly better resolution, not that it really matters), it didn't want to start showing a drop at first on the display. I lifted the hear up and blew on the coil and suddenly the display started to register change, almost immediately displayed about 2/3 degree's lower (it was on 520 before turning it down) and then proceeded to show a responsive display of the temp reduction until it settled on 510.Sounds like the deadzone/deadband setting is enabled. High Five does that with their LDC controller, too - annoying as hell! When the active temperature reading is within XX degrees of the Set/Target temperature, the display will only display the Set temp. There's probably a setting in the service menu to disable that / set it to 0.
The temperature probe in the SB's coil is down past the ball chamber over the thin wall that extends down over the bowl. I'd expect to see the temp drop quite a bit more than the B0 as a result of that since the bowl will immediately start leeching heat from those thin walls with no balls to buffer the heat transfer. That loss should show up quickly on the coil. Same story with the T360 (likely an even larger drop in the coil temp) and my own tethered Steamroller heads. I've seen as much as a 35-degree drop in the coil with the Steamroller, with barely any change within the actual ball chamber.
If I could wake up tomorrow and erase those bogus boiling point charts from the internet, I would do it. Have a look at this thread for some useful info on vaping temperatures:it easier and more accurate to home in on the desired profile by boiling points.
Good find! I searched around for the manual for the Vapvana controller and could not find it. I was going to reach out to SZ Crossing to see if they had one. Would you mind sharing the link here?The only setting I've discovered above the only instructions I've found on the net
Thanks for that but I'm already familiar with these issues, and (I may have missed something, I only quickly scanned that article) it doesn't even go as far as it could in explaining how you can't dial-a-terp in the way people seem to often think you can (even if it was possible to accurately and precisely measure the temperature at the tricome!). For one thing, on top of what's said, the mixing of different compounds in itself will change the boiling points of those compounds! Same principal as adding salt to ice to lower it's melting point. But far more complicated with the huge range of different compounds in the mix.If I could wake up tomorrow and erase those bogus boiling point charts from the internet, I would do it. Have a look at this thread for some useful info on vaping temperatures:
Boiling point myths and the science of flower vaporization
Okay, I just read another article (from a cannabis science site, no less) that completely missed how flower vaporization actually works. So, I wrote an article for Medium, and wanted to post it on FC for your comments and insights. This was written at a high level for a less knowledgeable...fuckcombustion.com
Its easy enough to add a temperature probe to your bowl, but what that tells you in general is dubious. So much is dependent on draw speed, cure of your flower, ambient temperature that I don't think there is anything generalizable there.
Ah! Um, er, oh dear! I think you may be expecting rather more than I can produce - hence my plaintive plea!Good find! I searched around for the manual for the Vapvana controller and could not find it. I was going to reach out to SZ Crossing to see if they had one. Would you mind sharing the link here?
Thanks for the feedback!Cool designs Glenn, but is the positioning of the coils toward the back going to make it harder to pick up and return the heads?
In fact, more so returning them as you wouldn't easily be able to see where to position the head to sit smoothly onto the coil receiver? Especially the upper design.
Or am I looking at it wrong?