He might be having a love affair with his tempest and trying to convince himself out of itLol. You don't even have it and you're telling people that do have one about the effects they're feeling?
You repeatedly suggest that you know more about the function of a device than... you know, people who've actually used it?
Every time you repeat the "it's just a big Anvil" line it shows everyone that has actually used a Tornado that you have no idea what you're talking about.
Combusted twice, the Inductor is so powerful.I am using it with the Inductor Right now till the Forge problem is fixed. It very fast heat up with the inductor , about 4-7 sec but you cannot trust the click . If you heat till the click , you will get combustion. But with the way the inductor works , it easy to apply more heat if it not hot enough .
sorry for my question as i don't know the inductor, but can't you adjusted the power?Combusted twice, the Inductor is so powerful.
Tempest is great. Tornado looks great too. Sorry to disappoint.He might be having a love affair with his tempest and trying to convince himself out of it
I think so. I've read that water (or a big temp difference) will undo the atomization.Maybe the smoothness difference would be more noticeable on a stem (I was running both thru water).
I think that's fair. For me the smoothness is remarkable and the high is big but I still am not sure it's not mostly load size. It also tends to roast aggressively so it looks and feels like very efficient extraction. I'm gonna have to compare measured loads too.I guess it just feels like an evolution of the Anvil to me rather than some entirely new beast.
See this makes me think the Tornado has more conduction, instead of less.There’s some voodoo behind the way the tornado milks. It’s thick right out the gate. There have been instances when I thought I for sure combusted but was far from it
To me, this and the smoothness are the biggest differences compared to the thermocore
See this makes me think the Tornado has more conduction, instead of less.
The smoothness, the instant vapour, and the pics @VapingYogi sent showing the colour of the herb before inhalation, all point to more conduction to me.
I think this may be true too, the roast tend to be complete.See this makes me think the Tornado has more conduction, instead of less.
The smoothness, the instant vapour, and the pics @VapingYogi sent showing the colour of the herb before inhalation, all point to more conduction to me.
I think the days of convection snobbery are mostly past us now, which is nice to see.I forgot to mention, I don't think more conduction is objectively better of worse. It's purely subjective and depends on the individual.
Personally more conduction is a plus, as my current line up is almost pure convection. Gives Tornado a point of differentiation.
This has got me wanting to try it on the Funkler, I think it'll run.There’s some voodoo behind the way the tornado milks. It’s thick right out the gate. There have been instances when I thought I for sure combusted but was far from it
To me, this and the smoothness are the biggest differences compared to the thermocore
I was looking for a way to minimize direct heating of the device when it is loaded. One way is to heat one cycle without load, but with the oven screwed in. Remove the oven after 1st click and drop in a nugget (I use victorinox tweezers). Then heat until "second" click, no more than 5 seconds. Inhale. I try to lengthen the heat fall off by by giving a few pulses after each hit. This way I kind of "surf" the Tornado's heat retention. When I start tasting popcorn, I stop. By then i have caramel colored ABV fine dust.I will only be using the Wand so I will definitely look for ways to heat it so as to maximize flavor and production
Not sure if this is what you meant but I've actually been having an easier time keeping the roast even and not overdone with the Tornado. I still haven't tried the Anvil XL bowl though so I suspect this might just be because the bowl is very easy to pack loosely, but I think the airflow and heat distribution differences are playing some role also.It also tends to roast aggressively
I have been packing fairly loosely but full most times. The roast has been very even but darker than I expected. No complaints, I haven't crossed the line, but I will have to see if I can walk it back just a tad. To be fair, i've been aiming some heat below the bowl for a few seconds and then just above and between the airholes. I tried one heatup a bit higher above the intakes and none on the throat and it was marginally lighter. I'm using a PB207 cranked.Not sure if this is what you meant but I've actually been having an easier time keeping the roast even and not overdone with the Tornado. I still haven't tried the Anvil XL bowl though so I suspect this might just be because the bowl is very easy to pack loosely, but I think the airflow and heat distribution differences are playing some role also.
Oh that makes sense. I'm using a Firefox or similar and have only been torching the main oven part so far.To be fair, i've been aiming some heat below the bowl for a few seconds and then just above and between the airholes. I tried one heatup a bit higher above the intakes and none on the throat and it was marginally lighter. I'm using a PB207 cranked.
That is a very cool method. I will try that for sure at some point. I have some concerns though.I was looking for a way to minimize direct heating of the device when it is loaded. One way is to heat one cycle without load, but with the oven screwed in. Remove the oven after 1st click and drop in a nugget (I use victorinox tweezers). Then heat until "second" click, no more than 5 seconds. Inhale. I try to lengthen the heat fall off by by giving a few pulses after each hit. This way I kind of "surf" the Tornado's heat retention. When I start tasting popcorn, I stop. By then i have caramel colored ABV fine dust.
I use a magnet to unscrew the oven. I prepare a nugget beforehand so I can drop it in quickly, I screw it back in with the magnet and unscrew it a tiny bit, also with the magnet. The heat does fall off so I often need 5 seconds heat up with the Wand. I think I'm hovering around the click this way. My goal is to minimize direct exposure to heating and to heat the entire device. It does need some practice. And usually I don't bother because it's a bit of faffing.o you need to be quick in dropping in the nugget and putting the oven back to avoid thread lock
Just did a quick read on vapor pressure for my curiosity and I had the relationship inverted. Conductive effects (temp increase) would raise, not lower the vapor pressure of the flower (trichomes) but the end result is the same, a state change would be easier.I don't know the entire physics of it but I would imagine it has much to do with conductive heat lowering the vapor pressure of the flower ...
Yep, a bit of controlled conduction totally helps with vapour production. I agree. Also, a lot of convection heaters need time to “spool up” so when a hybrid produces good vapour in the first pull that is typically the conduction doing the work.Just did a quick read on vapor pressure for my curiosity and I had the relationship inverted. Conductive effects (temp increase) would raise, not lower the vapor pressure of the flower (trichomes) but the end result is the same, a state change would be easier.
Yep! Convection is nice and tasty but often more work to coax vapor from the flower. You need long, slow pulls to maximize the time in contact with hot air.Yep, a bit of controlled conduction totally helps with vapour production. I agree. Also, a lot of convection heaters need time to “spool up” so when a hybrid produces good vapour in the first pull that is typically the conduction doing the work.
Yes. Agree completely. And I think the material science here is key. When glass of the right thickness is paired with the right amount of heat, you can enter that magical zone of conduction where the glass gets hot slowly and stays in the "goldilocks" temperature range. The slow ramp-up in temp of the glass, due to its insulative native confers lovely conductive heat without scorching.Another thing is when you run conduction heat through an insulator like glass, it seems to help slow the ramp up and smooth the temp curve which avoids some of the flavour and terp degradation associated with conduction.