I have been interested in finding some info on the theory behind specialty coil builds. Thanks. Any resources for further, more in depth, explanation of coil science?
Sent from my XT1528 using Tapatalk
Hmm... ...I don't know if I'm the best person to ask about that stuff. There's some excellent writing out there that's very illuminating when it comes to the fundamentals, but I never got much out of that, myself (it never clicked until I figured it out on my own) so I'm not familiar with much that really breaks it all down at the entry level.
I've learned what I know by process of elimination - trial and error. You start seeing the patterns and conventions more clearly as you go along. Once you start doing new builds every day, you get into the habit of conceptualizing them before you even do them. You start asking yourself what tweaking such and such variable will change about the performance and thus start getting more deliberate. You set goals within limitations by asking yourself "How can I get x result without compromising y?" Doing so prompts you to think about the mechanics in more detail, just based on what you pick up as you go along. The results and the questions they make you ask are your best teachers. You just have to make it a point to put the limits of what you know to the test. Find problems to solve.
It helps to just see what builders are talking about. That has honestly been my most valued resource for learning about the nitty-gritty stuff. The people who are into specialty builds also tend to be the most prolific builders by nature. They're constantly thinking about and trying new builds. A lot of enlightening discussions are taking place around the internet. I picked up a lot of great little tidbits along the way from following and participating in them.
I learned a lot in a short time just lurking around on places like this forum, youtube videos, ecr and the other various coil-related reddits... ...basically just by following and joining in the idle conversations of people who were always experimenting and trying to unravel the mechanics behind their builds. Watch what they try and ask them specific questions about specific builds. Specialty builders love to talk about their builds and posit on the how's/why's of them.
It's not hard science, you know? It's more like cooking. If you hang out in a cook's kitchen for long enough, your understanding of cooking starts to improve in ways that a recipe book can't facilitate. "Building theory" is a loose term that I try not to toss around because I feel it is misleading in that it implies that there is a clear and concise way to conceive of a build. It's more of a craft than anything - as much an art as it is science. The people who are best at it have usually been at it for a long time. The physics behind it are simple and can be picked-up quickly, but in practice, only experience knows best.
Point is, it's not something that you can just read a bunch about and expect to really understand. You kind of have to start breaking it down mechanic by mechanic on your own - it's a personal quest. There are countless factors involved in how a coil performs. This applies uniformly to all coils, from the simplest standard singles to the most hyper-elaborate 10+ wire coils. There's really no definitive school of thought on advanced-level building.
If you're really interested in learning more about advanced builds, I think its best to start by experimenting regularly with the most simple builds you can think of... ...do it until you reach a point where you can think up a coil entirely in your head and be able to, with reasonable success, intuit exactly how and what will make it perform the way that it does. Once you reach a point in your practice where you can do that, I think you will find your grasp of more complex coils expanding more readily.
I don't know how helpful any of this will actually be to you, but what I'm trying to get across here is that the mindset of the people who come up with their own specialty builds is not bound by rules and principles, but rather by subjectivity. It's not like they pull off interesting ideas because they know the hard science behind it. Many will tell you that they simply know what they know. And they know what they know because they have made a habit of doing things just to see what happens. They have their own whims and tastes. And over time, they have gone to lengths that to the outside observer are extraordinarily elaborate, but in reality, are not all that founded in anything concrete. Their wisdom is not a bed of closely guarded secrets. There's not nearly as much to it as there seems to be, and yet there's so much more to it that can't easily be explained... ...oftentimes not even by the builders themselves.
Just practice and observe! It's really that simple. Though they are somewhat necessary in a very fundamental sense, better understanding the mechanics and constructs behind advanced building is not so much a matter of how much knowledge and skill you have as it is a simple endeavor in sustained inquiry
. If you have any questions about specialized coils, why not ask your wire? Don't sweat the theory. Just build!