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How often do you replace the actual coils?

Jixil

Bronze Contributor
Member For 4 Years
Reddit Exile
I just recently started building my own coils since I figure it's a lot cheaper than buying premade ones, and I've been replacing my cotton every couple of weeks or so. How often do I actually need to replace the coil itself? It seems like if I keep it fairly clean, I don't really need to? When it starts to be a little bit burnt tasting, I know it's time to replace the cotton, but when should I be actually replacing the coils?
 

PoppaVic

Gold Contributor
Member For 4 Years
I tend to replace cotton/wick about weekly, but Coils -
  • when they are bad/poor,
  • when they are NOT doing what you "expect"
  • when you want to test another wire
  • when you wantto test another form
  • when you want ot test another wicking material.
As far as NEED: if today doesn't taste - to you - like yesterday; if the last puff was "bad", (or harsh or wrong) - change it all.

The "change" can be replication or alternate - you know and we don't.
 

UncleRJ

Will write reviews for Beer!
Staff member
Senior Moderator
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Platinum Contributor
Member For 4 Years
ECF Refugee
Reviewer
Moderator
I think I am right around 6 months
 

HondaDavidson

Gold Contributor
Member For 4 Years
When I feel like it....... never had a self wound coil fail from vaping in 4 years... those that did fail did so because I damaged them messing with em... or they just didn't give desired vape. My error again.

I have 2 atty with 1 year plus old coils 1 at 2 months and the 4th in rotation is 2 days old...... 1 of the 1 year old coils also gas a 1 year old silica wick in it.. the rest are cotton and those wicks get change every 20 to 30 ml of juice. I use 10ml per day.



Sent from my SCH-I605 using Tapatalk
 

Pastorfuzz

Gold Contributor
Member For 4 Years
VU Patreon
I have some SS Fused Claptons going on 5 months already and they still work fine.
I clean them when I change the cotton.
I use Everclear Grain alcohol and a nylon brush/pipe cleaner and lightly scrub them in and out.
Rinse with water and blow them and the deck out with compressed air.
Maybe a little overkill but it works for me.
 

lucifah

Shinyitis Victim
VU Donator
Bronze Contributor
Member For 3 Years
When I change the wick and/or juice, I usually change the coil too. Every other day? But then, I only use simple round wire "builds", so it takes me five minutes to do and costs next to nothing.
 

Jixil

Bronze Contributor
Member For 4 Years
Reddit Exile
Thanks for all the info guys! It seems like I can make them last a really long time as long as I just take care of it!
 

HondaDavidson

Gold Contributor
Member For 4 Years
Coils themselves can last a long time.. the hotter you get them and more you repeat that the shorter the life span..

The wick is what goes bad first even in coilheads.. difference is with a head you can change the wick. So bad wick = bad coil... with a Rebuildable atty you just change the wick and clean the coil...



Sent from my SCH-I605 using Tapatalk
 

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