purely anecdotal ... i have a much better vape session when i arrange the herb to maximize the convection: very lightly loaded in the vial. i.e. no grinding, nothing that causes the herb to end up in a dense pile. this provides maximum airflow around each trichome.
i have thought for the longest time that the ideal would be using concentrates. now i think this is wrong -- at least for my vape. i can use dry sift, but it must be scattered on bits of herb to be sure it is maximally exposed to the air flow.
so now my thinking is that the cannabis plant knows what it is doing by having the trichomes arrayed along the plant material in a single layer, not all jumbled up like in a concentrate -- or even dry sift. and a convection vape is able to easily harvest each trichome.
i still need to stir after the first half dozen hits ... this releases even denser vapor for the next 6 to 10 hits. my theory is the waxy shell of the trichomes fuse together and block exposure of the remaining thc to the air flow. the stir breaks this up.
The 'hot plate' type vape is the original conduction design, and a truly inefficient one. It's also what I think of, any time conduction vaping is mentioned. As with cooking a hamburger patty, pancake, etc., if the herb on a conduction plate just sits there, undisturbed, it won't get thoroughly cooked throughout, without overcooking/burning the side that's down. You also suck a lot of hot air with not a lot of vapor per hit- a very unenjoyable vaping experience. No company has designed a vape using this vaporization method in many years. Even conduction designs like the Magic Flight and FlashVape use screens, allowing some good air flow.Im a fan of Convection, Not just in our products but in all my history of Vaporizing i've always preferred Forced air Convection desktop units.
Like Vapehead was saying there is a study comparing the Volcano vs a hot plate style vaporizer, it has some very useful information about both styles. The problem though is that its mostly comparing two models as one is vastly superior technology. Ill try to dig the study up, from my records.
Cheers,
Tim
Some of the portables with enclosed heating chambers, that get described by some as conduction models, are really more convection than conduction, since they're designed to get hot air flow through the heating chamber, and thus through the herb load.
I came up with a very interesting theory when reading this.Conduction vaporizers expose some of the herb to hotter temperatures, compared to other parts of the herb, based on its distance form the conduction source. So the range of temperatures that the herb is exposed to is relatively high compared to Convection, all other things being equal. You can adjust the surface area of the conduction plate, the depth of the herb, the grind etc. so there are many, many variables here that would need to be properly controlled to answer the OP's question definitively. Probably too many. Your best option would be to design a vaporizer specifically to test each of these 3 temperature vectors - say to be able to set Convection to 60%, Conduction to 10%, Radiation to 28% - and to then cycle through all possible combinations with the same conditions (same herb, same ambient temperature, same warm-up time from ambient, etc. etc.). That's a huge project in itself. Maybe a Physics / Engineering vaporist can chime in on the theoretical transmission side of things - does it all just come down to a calculation, all other things being equal?
I came up with a very interesting theory when reading this.
First though, I want to address the idea of uneven heating, I don't have much knowledge in the area of fluid dynamics, but I don't believe that most "convection dominant" vapes are very even in their heating, just far more-so than "conduction dominant" equivalents. I think you would agree with that.
Now, on to the theory. With anecdotal evidence, I have found FAR greater expression of the X-factor with my primarily conduction dominant vape. I mean a far more potent experience is achieved, and I believe it comes down to evenness of heating, and more objectively, evenness of the spectrum of compounds vaporized. I think having higher proportions of higher boilers greatly potentiates the effects.
This is compared to other vaporizers that are either very similar, but convection dominant, or quite different.
The net result I have observed is as stated above, much more tame effects from vapes which heat more evenly/ deliver spectrum in much more narrow slices, versus vapes that have a large spectrum bias and much more profound experiences.
I think conversation has finally started to nail down the cause of this difference. If someone wants to experience what I am talking about, and has the will to learn a difficult vape, try using a vapionic without the test tube, and apply the heat directly to the glass surrounding the material. Don't operate heavy machinery, you will be amazed at the distinct difference between typical vapes and this conduction dominant style.
I agree with your assessment of error potential. I think if you try it you will find much truth to what I speak.There is a major problem of metrics presented here. While there are somewhat objective measures of pain that let us compare analgesic effects, there is nothing I'm aware of that yields a consistent objective measure of psychoactivity. I'm also of the opinion that the psychoactive effects vary depending on mood and state of mind, therefore exactly the same strains and temperatures can produce different effects in independent sessions. I think that if you believe in this difference strongly enough, then you will experience it. If you look for it, you will find it.
I came up with a very interesting theory when reading this.
First though, I want to address the idea of uneven heating, I don't have much knowledge in the area of fluid dynamics, but I don't believe that most "convection dominant" vapes are very even in their heating, just far more-so than "conduction dominant" equivalents. I think you would agree with that.
Now, on to the theory. With anecdotal evidence, I have found FAR greater expression of the X-factor with my primarily conduction dominant vape. I mean a far more potent experience is achieved, and I believe it comes down to evenness of heating, and more objectively, evenness of the spectrum of compounds vaporized. I think having higher proportions of higher boilers greatly potentiates the effects.
This is compared to other vaporizers that are either very similar, but convection dominant, or quite different.
The net result I have observed is as stated above, much more tame effects from vapes which heat more evenly/ deliver spectrum in much more narrow slices, versus vapes that have a large spectrum bias and much more profound experiences.
I think conversation has finally started to nail down the cause of this difference. If someone wants to experience what I am talking about, and has the will to learn a difficult vape, try using a vapionic without the test tube, and apply the heat directly to the glass surrounding the material. Don't operate heavy machinery, you will be amazed at the distinct difference between typical vapes and this conduction dominant style.
I agree with your assessment of error potential. I think if you try it you will find much truth to what I speak.
OO said:... try using a vapionic ...
I came up with a very interesting theory when reading this.
First though, I want to address the idea of uneven heating, I don't have much knowledge in the area of fluid dynamics, but I don't believe that most "convection dominant" vapes are very even in their heating, just far more-so than "conduction dominant" equivalents. I think you would agree with that.
Now, on to the theory. With anecdotal evidence, I have found FAR greater expression of the X-factor with my primarily conduction dominant vape. I mean a far more potent experience is achieved, and I believe it comes down to evenness of heating, and more objectively, evenness of the spectrum of compounds vaporized. I think having higher proportions of higher boilers greatly potentiates the effects.
This is compared to other vaporizers that are either very similar, but convection dominant, or quite different.
The net result I have observed is as stated above, much more tame effects from vapes which heat more evenly/ deliver spectrum in much more narrow slices, versus vapes that have a large spectrum bias and much more profound experiences.
I think conversation has finally started to nail down the cause of this difference. If someone wants to experience what I am talking about, and has the will to learn a difficult vape, try using a vapionic without the test tube, and apply the heat directly to the glass surrounding the material. Don't operate heavy machinery, you will be amazed at the distinct difference between typical vapes and this conduction dominant style.
VapeHead said:But a nice third variable that you don't get in a lot of products, and they should all have them imho, the ability to 'pulse' the heat either by hitting off and on again to the beat of a drum to fine-tune the temperature
It tends to feel like this, to me: convection can heat up a mass uniformly, with good airflow penetration, in a rapid amount of time. Unfortunately this tends to result in this gradual decarboxylation, and produces more of an early THC high then CBD etc. later, with the most aromatic volatiles at the beginning all of the flavour. Teasing it out like this is what convection excels at, as the temperature is relatively stable with an evenly dense grind the only real variable is airflow speed.
Conduction's more like an Oven, and the cool thing about ovens is that you can get them up to temp first - then put in your food to cook. That way you get more of an instantaneous vaporisation of the full spectrum of actives and flavours all at once. Dabs seem to be the logical extreme in this direction.
The cool thing is you don't have to go one or the other, you simply have to find the right tool that is capable of both - while still giving you a large amount of choice in the variables. Soak-time, for example, you can choose to get your element up to temp quicker or even to go higher than the normal temperatures with that tool. Airflow's the yin to its yang. But a nice third variable that you don't get in a lot of products, and they should all have them imho, the ability to 'pulse' the heat either by hitting off and on again to the beat of a drum to fine-tune the temperature, or being able to lift the heat source away from the bowl during use.
^^^
the herbalizer (not out yet) is making the claim to be able to do this.
the Ion claimed to be accurate within 2C, but I doubt it was measuring the airflow temp.
Thank you very much for that, it is quite interesting, and possibly quite the explanation of the observed effects.I get what your saying, but I think it has more to do with temperature, and how you load the bowl, then conduction giving a more powerful effect then convection. Remember if you using a lighter, that is a very hot temperature touching the glass, so it will release a lot of cannabinoids quickly, but you can do the same with an even better chance of getting the actives with very little burn, with a convection vape if you use a temperature over 410f, and load your bowl small, and loosely, so air can go through your herb efficiently.
You also have to take into account, a lot of the thc turns into cbn when it sits in the "globe" as vapor is being released, and this may give the stone a lot of people like, as opposed to a strong "high". This was one of the things found when using conduction vaporizers with the fish bowl top. Here's a piece about it:
http://www.ukcia.org/research/pipes.php
The vaporizer results appeared more promising, but confusing. The two vaporizers were the only devices to outscore unfiltered joints in terms of raw cannabinoid/tar ratio. The electric hotplate vaporizer did best, with a performance ratio about 25% higher than the unfiltered joint. The hot air gun was just marginally superior, but might have done better had it not been for its water filtration component.
However, the situation was complicated by the fact that the cannabinoids produced by the electric hotplate vaporizer were unusually high in CBN, leaving 30% less THC as a percentage of the total cannabinoids than with the other smoking devices. Since CBN is not psychoactive like THC, recreational users might be expected to consume more smoke to make up for the deficit. (The situation may be different for medical users, who could experience other, medicinal benefits from CBN). For this reason, it seemed advisable to recompute the performance efficiencies of the vaporizers in terms of THC, rather than all cannabinoids. When this was done, the electric hotplate vaporizer turned out to have a lower THC/tar ratio than the unfiltered joint, while the hot air gun was still marginally higher.
The reason for the excess CBN from the hotplate vaporizer remains unexplained. Because CBN is produced from THC by chemical oxidation, it has been suggested that the device somehow exposed the sample to too much oxygen. However, there is no evidence that this was the case."
"
My current two devices of choice are the LB, which is mostly conduction, and the FV with the S2 spacer, which is pretty close to 100% convection. I haven't noticed much difference in effects between the two, however I haven't looked for them either. I'll try some experiments but as I said, I don't know how to measure the outcomes.
Quite right, quite right.that vape is essentially what my vape is. Except -- instead of butane i have a nichrome coil that is digitally controlled to maintain a setpoint temperature.
i agree that increasing the heat -- which invariably happens when trying to use a torch lighter to hit vape temperature -- will give an effect more like smoking, but without the combustion (usually), although i suspect it is quite easy to combust with that design. until you get the hang of it. once again, the old learning curve.
edit: luchiano beat me to it!
The Solo is not a conduction based vaporizer; more like convection based with some conduction.I'm digging the solo but I'm finding its much less efficient than my SSV due to it being mostly conduction based
I feel like I'm loosing vapor while the Solo it not being hit from the constant heat.
Also due to the conduction aspect the solo also seems to rip through a bowl much faster, and because of this it has been easy to slowly (without purpose) up my usage.
I feel that since mostly switching to my Solo from the SSV I am using more weed.
The Solo is not a conduction based vaporizer; more like convection based with some conduction.
You can remove the stem between hit's and reduce the limited conduction quite a bit. I think some conduction may be good because it can keep the bowl from taking heat from the passing air, and material that would be shielded from the air stream will be heated by conduction, maybe contributing to more even heating.
What wand do you use with your SSV?