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bmclaurin

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Posts posted by bmclaurin

  1. I’m running escribe 2.0 with my 75C and noticed the Mod tab no longer has a field for Wh capacity of battery. I’m using the Manufacturer interface. Has that been left out intentionally? If so, why? Frankly, I never understood how that setting was used by the chip to estimate remaining battery capacity anyway because it seemed to me that state of charge could be reliably estimated from the discharge curve (.csv) alone. 

  2. Mooch rates it as a 25A 2500mAH cell. Obviously, usable capacity will depend on rate of discharge. Mooch's test results indicate ~2300mAH @ 10A, ~2140mAH @ 25A. His tests use a cutoff of 2.8v, so your results will likely vary if you are using a different cutoff voltage in your mod.

    https://www.e-cigarette-forum.com/forum/threads/sony-vtc5a-2500mah-18650-bench-test-results-a-fantastic-25a-battery.746719/

     

  3. Well the battery analyzer isn't going to make your battery life any better. But it will make your meter more accurate. In terms of the resistor for the test, anything that will dissipate the load without overheating is fine, but I do believe if you're going to use loops of resistance wire, it would be best to use non-TC wire. John posted somewhere a while back that you want a constant resistance for the test. I use 4 large-ish loops of kanthal in parallel around .3 ohms or so in total. Arrange the loops so there is plenty of free space for the heat to dissipate into the surrounding air. A desktop fan wouldn't hurt because it will heat up a bit.

  4. Until someone more knowledgeable than I comes along...I guess that's true, but TBH I've never bothered with that. Just load up the .csv for whatever coil material you're using and vape on. As long as you're using standard TC materials, the .csv's on steam-engine are battle tested, and I've never had a problem with them.

    And when I say "never had a problem with them," I mean that literally. We're talking tens of thousands (probably more) of hits, and never a burnt hit. Not even once. The very few times I've had hits that were obviously too warm, it was not TCR-related; usually it was because
    of a loose leg or maybe an inaccurate cold ohms measurement or something like that.

  5. bmclaurin said:

    Anyone tried this with nicrome 80? Most of my non-TC builds are nichrome, which has an ever so slightly larger TFR than kanthal. Wondering what I should change the coefficients by to make it work.


    I answered my own question. It works! I just used the same method of adding .1 to each point after 382F.

    Device monitor results are below. And my .csv file is attached if anyone is interested.

    Device_Monitor.jpg

    Nichrome_N80.csv

  6. Not sure if this will help or not, but it worked for me. I was having similar issues with my Wismec Releaux DNA 200. It worked fine for a couple months, but then sporadically started not turning on. In my case, it was a battery connection issue, and it was definitely always with the cell that sits "by itself," farthest away from the 510. Upon closer inspection, it appeared that the top deck had gotten bent--by a very very slight amount, mind you--upward, over time. Perhaps I was using cells that were slightly too long, I don't know. But I do know that, upon looking very closely, the bend was definitely there.

    All I did to "fix" it was to remove the cells, and bend it back straight again by putting a slight amount of downward pressure on the top deck. It has been working perfectly ever since.

    "Bendgate" LOL

    [image] 

  7. I just looked at the first file you attached. It needs to be comma-delimited. One fairly easy way to do it with steam-engine.org is to go to the Wire Wizard tab, choose your material, then go to the Temperature Control Results box at the top and click on the DNA 200 tab. Then select everything in the box with your mouse and copy it to your clipboard. Then open up Notepad in Windows and paste it into there. Then save that file with a filename of your choice and be sure to give it a .csv filename extension. Then you can import that file into eScribe.

  8. I haven't used that tank and/or coil, but I've read some reports of folks having trouble with them. That said, how much are the ohms changing by? If you're talking +/- .01 ohms or so, then I wouldn't worry about it. If it's moving a little bit more than that, you could try locking the resistance once you're confident you have a good cold reading. But if it's all over the place, you could have a defective coil. Have you run the atomizer analyzer in escribe? That tool can be helpful in spotting problem coils.

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