well i think those two vapes - volcano and blue meanie - represent convection vs conduction vaporizers. even though there is some conduction going on any time the bud is sitting on a metal screen or anything that can get heat saturated.
This discredits the whole study lol ... As far as I am concerned, the ammonia was added by the cops to the first sample32paths said:Hippie Dickie,
To my knowledge there is no description of the process of creating the ammonia other than it is released within the temperature range of vaporization. The study states that it was not designed to test the exact mechanisms of production of the low MW products of vaporization. The researchers used 2 cannabis samples; one was "street" cannabis that had been seized during various drug raids in the UK & the other was a standard 3% THC level cannabis donated by the NIDA. What should be mentioned is that the 3% Cannabis supplied by the NIDA showed very little Ammonia release during vaporization & combustion as compared to the street samples. The Ammonia concentrations they reported were in the 3-6 p.p.m. range
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The aim of this study was to evaluate the vaporization process, but it didn't do exactly that. Instead, we now see a study the evaluates sample A vs sample B. This allows for the study to be interpreted. You refer to the sample A as the study result. But if you refer to the sample B, then the result is completely different and dosen't have any issues with ammonia.32paths said:Fail,
Looking through past research it is quite obvious that Cannabis, whether combusted or Vaporized will release Ammonia, regardless of the source. The real question is how much is considered average. I dont think the police would take the time to saturate the samples with such precise amounts of Ammonia, in the hopes of tainting some study. If they really wanted to make an impact, they would have added a much more dangerous, "newsworthy" compound.
Believe it or not, it is the truth.Durden said:I remember reading a story last year about people putting glass dust all over their stuff to make it look shiny and nice, and that's much harder to believe than ....
I don't know the numbers, as there are many different percents, but so far what it seems like to me, and makes sense, is that you get the least thc from a joint, and the most from a vape. Correct me if I'm wrong but the order seems j/l, pipe, bong, vape, in that order from least to most. Now they are saying here that a joint gives off 10ppm when inhaled, but 250mm from the combustion point at the end of the joint, and something around 50-70ppm for a vape. If this is correct, and with what I said earlier, each piece would then, in theory, give off a different reading? In this case each piece would give off a different reading, as I said before. The main measure would be on the amount of tar and crap you're getting in your system, each piece is different and has different filtering methods, if none at all. They would also need to test this out in individual strains. It's also a possibility that each strain gives off a different amount of these chemicals, so in reality, there is a ton more of research to do.hereatlast said:I would think that the main point of research shouldn't be point of delivery but what is being delivered, maybe I was confused by your post Konrad? Nonetheless I would think that the smoke being delivered through different devices is fairly similar (of course a joint or blunt would include a significant amount of extraneous material) though they would differ most in stream-off and efficiency.
I continually doubt that whats being used in cannabis research is high-grade material but it seems I'm definitely wrong in this case; although 3% THC isn't that high is it? I thought I remembered (but very possible that I'm dreaming) reading about THC percentages in the double digits for high-grade
Bag blowers have air intakes; I don't think it's possible to have vapor in a vacuum.not on baloon devices
That test indicates lower levels of ammonia than the NIDA sample (and insanely lower ammonia levels than the UK sourced cannabis), which already had levels below permissible exposure levels according to OSHA standards. This might even support my claim that the unsafe ammonia levels in the UK sample vs your own as well as the NIDA sample are due to the cannabis itself having spoiled/started to spoil...look below
http://fuckcombustion.com/threads/a...-a-filter-help-remove-them.20291/#post-903939
little experiment i did with a aquarium test kit . you can see there is indeed ammonia levels . even from what should be considered very clean cannabis . although it would be considered a very small amount i think ..
That test indicates lower levels of ammonia than the NIDA sample (and insanely lower ammonia levels than the UK sourced cannabis), which already had levels below permissible exposure levels according to OSHA standards. This supports my claim that the unsafe ammonia levels in the UK sample vs your own as well as the NIDA sample are due to the cannabis itself having spoiled/started to spoil.
Moreover, I'd not be relying on a water ammonia level test for testing cannabis.
If you're getting between 1-4ppm of ammonia, you don't have much to worry about my friend
lol I must have noticed you were looking at the bubbler water just as you replied to me brother (see the edit to my above post) - point taken thoughdont forget though , that was only the amount that was scrubbed from the vapor by the water . it doesnt really tell how much ammonia was in the vapor ,that wasnt scrubbed out .
dont get me wrong im not really worried about it but it does apear to be there . it would be nice for some more testing and studies on vapor in general which im sure we will see hopefully more of soon