Any e-smokers? Post your gear..

Been a year and I still haven't smoked a CIG..I am not using the Aspire sub ohm mode with a wide boar tank. Looking to upgrade to a higher watt mod. What has been going on with the fam that started vaping when this thread was made?

Congratulations mayne. I been vaping for a month. I hate the smell and taste of newports now.
 
Thanks fam! I never believed that I could ever stop smoking bta. I was just too reliant on them.

Oh man CIGs smell nasty as fuck man! I can't believe I never smelled them when I was a smoker.

Exactly. I can smell it on people, i cant believe that i used to smell like that too!
 
My wife still smokes and it makes me mad as hell cause before I quit smoking we went through a shared pack a day...It's been a year and her ass still smokes damn near a pack a day by herself. I was happy I quit cause I one...my health and two saving big money on buying that poison...Nope her goofy ass just can't cut back!

And the smell is bogish man, I hate it...I smell it in my shirts, her clothes and carpet!
 
Waiting on this to arrive in the mail. I love the Innokin brand. Im also going will buy a Kanger sub nano or mini to use with this in a few days.

Innokin MVP 3.0 60W Pro with iSub G

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Only been using this joint for about about 2 weeks but i've filled the
reservoir once and it's still half full.The smell and taste is a lot
better than cigs or blacks too.

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I don't know if that makes a difference or not but i use that Kanger SUBTANK-NANO.

Peace
 
Coped the kangertech evod mega now the innoken cool fire. Whats a good website to buy from?
 
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OK, I've been in this vape thing for 4 years now. It's a whole different world.

Right now I've got the OG 40 Watt VaporShark (yeah I know, it was a beast when it came out AND it's an Ohm reader though that's pretty common now)

I've also got the Wismec Reuleaux RX200 which is a fucking beast! 3 DooDoo brown 18650 batteries and it'll last me 2 days on a charge if not more.

Finally I have the IPV5 which is also a beast.

As far as tanks are concerned, I don't really use them much but when I'm driving or just want something simple I use the Cleito with the bubble tank add on with a Stainless Steel coil in in temp control.

Mostly, though I'm a dripper and to that end I have the Temple with a Clapton build and the Fat Buddha with a regular 8 wrap 24 gauge kanthal build. Both with great flavor and massive clouds.

Still haven't touched a Newport. Vaping saves lives.
 
Damn I just found this thread. I'm glad I find myself in such a large group. Next month makes A year without a cigarette. I smoked for over 27 years. Now I can ride my bike 20 miles no problem, do all cardio harder, longer, and fuck like I was in my 20's. I started out with 18 mg of nicotine i'm down to 3 mg. I find it therapeutic to build my own coils. Kanthal 26 gauge quadruple twist 5 turns. The dual coil set up gets me to .25 ohms. Perfect for me. I only vape the premium juices. Here are some links where you can get them at a discount. If you shop around you can get up to 25% discount with free shipping. All my gear I get off E-Bay. They are the least expensive.

1. http://vapingcheap.com/vape/deals/cheap-ejuice/
2. https://vapefalcon.com/
3. https://101vape.com/
4. https://breazy.com/

My current rig until I get bored again LOL.

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OK. Yea that first couple of hits had me coughing like a CIG. So the hot water trick would help wit that?

Sent from my BLU STUDIO 5.0 II using Tapatalk
What your experiencing is called a throat hit. When you order your juice reduce your PG content to to 50 meaning if your ratio should be about 50PG/50VG. If you are sub ohm the ratio should be 20PG/80VG. Trust I learned this the hard way. Also reduce the nicotine to 6mg or 3mg sub ohm.
 
Sorry you are still giving yourself cancer....


Report: E-cigarette vapor releases cancerous chemicals

Vapor from electronic cigarettes contains two previously undiscovered cancer-causing chemicals, according to a new study.

Researchers at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory found propylene glycol, an eye and respiratory irritant, and glycerin, a skin, eye and respiratory irritant, among 29 other chemicals released in e-cigarette vapor.

Both are considered “probable carcinogens” by federal health officials. They’re used in e-cigarettes to create artificial smoke.

Decomposition of those chemicals, caused by heating them inside an e-cig, also releases toxic chemicals such as acrolein and formaldehyde, according to the study published in the journal Environmental Science and Technology.

“Advocates of e-cigarettes say emissions are much lower than from conventional cigarettes, so you’re better off using e-cigarettes,” Hugo Destaillats, the study’s author and Berkeley Lab researcher, said in a statement.

“I would say, that may be true for certain users — for example, long time smokers that cannot quit — but the problem is, it doesn’t mean that they’re healthy. Regular cigarettes are super unhealthy. E-cigarettes are just unhealthy,” he said.

Researchers simulated “vaping” with three types of “e-liquids” in two vaporizers operated at different battery settings.

The higher the temperature inside the vaporizer’s heating coil, the more chemicals were emitted. E-cigs with one heating coil instead of two released higher amounts of chemicals because the coil was hotter, the study found.

And puffs taken at different times released varying amounts of chemicals, the research showed. Vapes taken while an e-cig was heating up released lower levels of chemicals than when the device was used at a “steady state” with constant heat.

Previous studies have already shown e-cigarettes emit toxic chemicals. The FDA in 2009 warned that some e-cigarettes emit diethylene glycol, a chemical used in antifreeze. A 2015 study in the New England Journal of Medicine found e-cigs give off formaldehyde, another carcinogen.

And e-cigarette use has also spiked in the United States. More than 13 percent of middle and high school students in 2014 had used an e-cigarette, triple the number that had used them the year before, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention .
 
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Teens using e-cigarettes show evidence of same toxic chemicals as smokers: Study

Using e-cigarettes has been promoted as a way to help adult smokers cut back or quit smoking, or at least to minimize the health damage that smoking causes. Teens, even middle schoolers, have taken up e-cigarettes as well. But as researchers continue to study their safety, a new report in Pediatrics shows vaping could lead to the presence of concerning levels of toxic chemicals.

Almost 100 teens from the San Francisco Bay area were examined in the University of California-San Francisco study: 67 teens used e-cigarettes only, 16 used both e-cigarettes and conventional cigarettes and 20 didn't smoke or vape at all.

Urine and salivary gland testing looked for breakdown products of toxic chemicals that have been associated with cancer -- and found them in both smokers and vapers -- but not those who didn’t smoke at all.

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A variety of electronic cigarette flavors are displayed for sale at an electronic cigarette store

Those who smoked cigarettes and used e-cigarettes had urine samples that indicated a higher presence of benzene, ethylene oxide, acrylonitrile, acrolein and acrylamide (all associated with higher risks of cancer). Levels were three times as high as those who used just e-cigarettes.

In turn, the “e-cigarette only” group had three times more evidence of the presence of acrylonitrile, acrolein, propylene oxide, acrylamide, and crotonaldehyde as non-users. Those chemicals, as well, are associated with a higher cancer risk.

The researchers write, "The presence of harmful ingredients in e-cigarette vapor has been established; we can now say that these chemicals are found in the body of human adolescents who use these products."

Apparently, the “flavor” of the e-cigarette cartridge matters. Among e-cigarette-users, the levels of acrylonitrile were higher in those who preferred fruit flavors -- compared to candy, tobacco or menthol flavors.
 
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