Tuesday, September 23, 2014
DIY & Electronic Cigarettes
I am a DIY kind of guy. Few of my hobbies, interests, or habits have escaped this predilection. I want to understand what I am doing, control it, improve it, and/or pay less for it. So it was natural, even unavoidable, for me to dig into ecig DIY.
I started off on the DIY journey pretty early in my vaping career, making a box mod from spare parts laying around - an act of desperation, as I had broken my Ego battery, and it was late on a Saturday before there were B&M ecig shops ion my city, just a few mall kiosks that were closed on sundays. Next up, the marketplace was entered by the Rebuildable Atomizer, and I was sold as soon as I saw one. I got the Vivi rebuildable tanks, a v1 and a few v2's. While not in the class that more recent RBA's and RTA's are in, this device was good enough to replace disposables. When I got my 1st Igo W RDA, I was finally there, I had arrived at an option that was better - far better - than a disposable Cart. The experience was very close to smoking, and in a different world entirely from the vapor produced by the cigarette-looking devices that were my first intro to vaping.
The next step in my DIY odyssey was making my own ejuice. This step was a bit more ballsy, as screwing up here could have serious consequences. So I spent a lot more time researching and educating myself. And I took the first steps very conservatively: I bought nicotine base that was just a step more strong than the concentration I was aiming for (started with 36 mg/ml base, to make batches of 24mg/ml strength). The initial cost was pretty much what I was spending on store-bought ejuice, but the yield was a substantial multiple of my monthly 'juice purchase.
The trick to making DIY 'juice a practical move, is getting a finished product that you like. You can make safe, properly constituted ejuice at a fraction of the price of buying it retail; but if it doesnt taste great, its a waste of your time and money. So in addition to researching the proper way to make ejuice, there is a whole other realm of study that you cannot really do without - Flavor.
Flavor is relative, subjective, and personal. One persons' sense of taste, their palate, is an organ that feeds objective information to that person. But that data cannot leave the person in an objective format - it becomes subjective in transit. There is a science of flavor; but its subjective qualities cannot be avoided. So, choosing a flavor using any sense other than your own sense of taste is a difficult thing to do. Finding your perfect, great tasting flavor concentrates is a difficult task.
One way I found to ease the difficulties of crafting ejuice flavors, is by reading and posting on ecig Forum sites. I really get a lot of use out of the "Electronic Cigarette Forum", for a wide variety of topics including DIY flavors/flavoring. Another means of gathering info is to read the comments about flavor concentrates on Vendor Sites. Ecig Express and RTS Vapes both have good customer comment/review threads attached to the flavor concentrates listed on their sites.
The easiest way to guarantee you will like a flavor, is to obtain a flavor concentrate of a ready-made ejuice flavor you have tried already, and enjoy. The easiest path here is to use Dekang flavors, as they are available all over the place. I.D. a Dekang brand ejuice that you like, then order the concentrate - easy as pie.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment