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John

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Posts posted by John

  1. If you are switching between profiles with the Ti coil installed, it shouldn't ask you if it is a new coil, or if it does (because it is hot or whatever) 

    Is the coil resistance it reads in atomizer analyzer different after switching between profiles? We'll take a look. 

  2. It needs to be 70F, but realistically if you normalize around 68 you'll only have a few degrees worth of error. 

    It is only Escribe. If you right click on the data point in the graph editor it will show you full precision. Internally it is 16 bits below the decimal point. That's increments of 0.0000152587890625

    I'll let James answer about the internals. I know there is a limit just due to storage space (remember, we carry one for each profile) but I'm not sure what it is.

  3. In normal operation, the board runs somewhere between 100 and 150F. 

    This is the foam tape we used to hold the screen in the beta mods:

    http://www.mcmaster.com/#7109a31/=y3hy2a

    It is probably overkill, but it works nicely and you don't need much per unit. 

  4. By default, if it sees more than a 25% difference between the resistance at which you locked the atomizer and what it is reading now, it will assume that there is a new coil and lock to the new ohms. 

    We do this because otherwise, if you had something with a .5 ohm cold resistance locked, and screw on a .1 ohm without unlocking it would try to preheat (possibly at 200W) to something like 1 ohm. Which would be several thousand degrees. Suboptimal. 

    However, if you have an atomizer that is making terrible contact or shifts around significantly, you can make it consider a wider range. The setting is in Mod, under Electrical, Ohm Lock Range. 

    Try setting that to somewhat wider, maybe 40% for your particularly shifty RDA


  5. No reason you can't use a right angle connector solder through the holes, rather than a straight connector surface mounted. Or use an extension cable soldered into the holes. 

    The battery taps don't carry any fast data signals or anything like that, and the max current is 40 milliamps, so you can pretty much move or wire them willy nilly and as long as they're making contact you're good to go. 

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