Been meaning to post this for a long time but never bothered to register...
I have combusted several times with my T1 - full combustion with smoke pouring out of the mouthpiece and a clearly identifiable burnt "cherry" in the bowl. When combustion starts on the T1 it is really obvious. After the first few times I started paying more attention to how long I let it warm up, how quickly I drew my hits, etc...
Then one day I combusted on the very first hit of a newly loaded bowl. It started as soon as I started drawing (less than a second). I had heated the unit the same as always, using material that I had used many times before.
That's when it struck me that maybe heating time, draw technique, and the moisture of the material had nothing to do with the combustion. I believe what happened is that finely ground material fell through the bottom screen into the heater core. While this would normally be incinerated in the core, it is possible that "when the stars align" this material may actually be sucked back into the bowl once I start to draw. The glowing, super hot ember ignites the rest of the bowl.
I don't grind super-fine, but even so there will always be some particles that are smaller than others - small enough to fit through the holes in the screen.
This is just a theory. The odds of material falling through the screen and then making it back through the screen into the bowl before being incinerated seem pretty low, which would explain why combustion is pretty rare in the T1.
Anyone else have this experience?
I have combusted several times with my T1 - full combustion with smoke pouring out of the mouthpiece and a clearly identifiable burnt "cherry" in the bowl. When combustion starts on the T1 it is really obvious. After the first few times I started paying more attention to how long I let it warm up, how quickly I drew my hits, etc...
Then one day I combusted on the very first hit of a newly loaded bowl. It started as soon as I started drawing (less than a second). I had heated the unit the same as always, using material that I had used many times before.
That's when it struck me that maybe heating time, draw technique, and the moisture of the material had nothing to do with the combustion. I believe what happened is that finely ground material fell through the bottom screen into the heater core. While this would normally be incinerated in the core, it is possible that "when the stars align" this material may actually be sucked back into the bowl once I start to draw. The glowing, super hot ember ignites the rest of the bowl.
I don't grind super-fine, but even so there will always be some particles that are smaller than others - small enough to fit through the holes in the screen.
This is just a theory. The odds of material falling through the screen and then making it back through the screen into the bowl before being incinerated seem pretty low, which would explain why combustion is pretty rare in the T1.
Anyone else have this experience?