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Nicotine for DIY Juice

jstyezy

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Finally I am going DIY but can't seem to find nicotine anywhere. I am using 3mg nicotine and would like to stick to that until the time is right to reduce it.

Where do I find it in U.A.E?

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5150sick

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jstyezy

Member For 2 Years
Member For 1 Year
Finally I received the Liquid Nicotine 100ml through FedEx. Delivered to my doorstep from China, for a shipping fee of $15 which is not bad. It came labelled as 100% VG and they threw in a free liquid concentrate of double Apple with the box. All smooth and didn't have to deal with anybody.

Thanks Everyone for suggesting HiLiq and I'll order more from them

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bobnat

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Member For 4 Years
Finally I received the Liquid Nicotine 100ml through FedEx. Delivered to my doorstep from China, for a shipping fee of $15 which is not bad. It came labelled as 100% VG and they threw in a free liquid concentrate of double Apple with the box. All smooth and didn't have to deal with anybody.

Thanks Everyone for suggesting HiLiq and I'll order more from them

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Remember you have to cut that down with PG. Mix it with 200ml of PG and you'll end up with 300ml at 33mg which is much easier to work with.
 

jstyezy

Member For 2 Years
Member For 1 Year
The one i ordered is 100ml nicotine with 100% VG base. do I still need to cut it down?

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jstyezy

Member For 2 Years
Member For 1 Year
You have got to do some learning.
Bob I found a website that does the calculation for me. All I have to do is enter the desired strength and the total nic level of my nicotine and it gives the amount of liquid nicotine to be used in ml or grams.

I find it fairly easy, what is your opinion?
0aa72f50201030f2a6f8d24da0bb9479.jpg


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BoomStick

Gold Contributor
Member For 5 Years
I use 100mg nic base to make my juice. To make it simple after figuring out my recipe percentages I just make 100ml batches. That way 1ml of base liquids and flavors equals 1%. And 1ml of 100mg nic base equals 1mg juice. Or 3ml equals 3mg juice or whatever. Just how I do it to make it super easy. No calculators or pre-diluting necessary.
 

bobnat

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Member For 4 Years
Bob I found a website that does the calculation for me. All I have to do is enter the desired strength and the total nic level of my nicotine and it gives the amount of liquid nicotine to be used in ml or grams.

I find it fairly easy, what is your opinion?
0aa72f50201030f2a6f8d24da0bb9479.jpg


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I use that all the time. However, you have to watch the numbers. For example, there will be 3 ingredients at the same percentage, say 1.5%. It'll list one at 0.16 gm, another at .18 and the last one at 17. I'll do the math and then use the correct one for all. Other than that, it's a great tool.
 

jstyezy

Member For 2 Years
Member For 1 Year
I use that all the time. However, you have to watch the numbers. For example, there will be 3 ingredients at the same percentage, say 1.5%. It'll list one at 0.16 gm, another at .18 and the last one at 17. I'll do the math and then use the correct one for all. Other than that, it's a great tool.
I'll learn more about the calculations, for the time being I got a 0.001g scale and just made my first DIY. Fingers crossed

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gopher_byrd

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ELR is a good calculator. There are a lot of flavorings in it's database and the ones that have a known specific gravity that is what it will use for figuring out the grams to use in the recipe. This explains the 1.5% of three flavors showing different weights. For the flavors they don't know the specific gravity they use a generic 1 ml = 1 gram.
 

bobnat

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Member For 4 Years
ELR is a good calculator. There are a lot of flavorings in it's database and the ones that have a known specific gravity that is what it will use for figuring out the grams to use in the recipe. This explains the 1.5% of three flavors showing different weights. For the flavors they don't know the specific gravity they use a generic 1 ml = 1 gram.

I did not know that. I just checked a bunch for their weights. Most don't have one listed, so perhaps they use a standard one. Some do have them and this would probably account for the discrepancy. The next time I see it, I'll check that specific flavor's specs.

You learn something new everyday. Thanks.
 

jstyezy

Member For 2 Years
Member For 1 Year
ELR is a good calculator. There are a lot of flavorings in it's database and the ones that have a known specific gravity that is what it will use for figuring out the grams to use in the recipe. This explains the 1.5% of three flavors showing different weights. For the flavors they don't know the specific gravity they use a generic 1 ml = 1 gram.
thanks for the info as Bobnat said you learn something new everyday. I'll definitely check it out

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