What people fail to understand is the limitations of the voltmeter. I have yet to see a DC Voltmeter under $500 capable of reading in Vrms (Vrms in AC is fairly common). This is why we simply use $100 USB Oscilloscopes. The meter he uses is a $40 Home Depot meter, obviously capable of reading a PWM signal. If I'm reading the meter's manual correctly, it is reading in Vavg (volts average). Furthermore, there is nothing on the display showing metered or entered duty cycle which is necessary for measuring Vrms. This practically proves my suspicions. I can't wait til mine is shipped and I can get it on my scope...
The fact that Eleaf and Joyetech are playing this silly game raises serious questions of their integrity. They could have just as easily put it on an oscilloscope and settled this once and for all.
On further thought... While the iStick's display matches the meter's Volt reading (in volts average), the displayed Watts are not even remotely accurate until the device fires at maximum voltage (and maybe not even then). Why would Joyetech open itself up to a possible class-action lawsuit?
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