Why are claptons so popular and why would you even use one...no really.
Claptonning a core wire/wires allows you to control the ramp up/down time and increases the coil to wick surface area without the need to have a huge number of wraps. It also creates a number of built in vent holes where vapour can escape from every part of the coil - it's gonna drink juice. A normal tight wound coil (commonly termed a micro coil) acts more like a tin can oven, the wires are sealing in the wick and as the wire expands with heat that will get even tighter. By changing the diameter and/or wiretype of the clapton wrap you can alter the heat up/cool down characteristics of the coil. Generally it is accepted that around 8 AWG difference is good (so 26AWG core 34AWG wraps for example). Less difference will make the coil very slow to heat up/cool off, more difference will lessen the coil mass and make hardly any difference to the characteristics of the coil. Many people control this heat flux by using different types of wire for the clapton wrap and the core maybe SS 316 core with a Ka1 wrap - the possibilities are finite
So two main things are at play with a claptonned wire 1. The wire surface area for the same number of wraps is increased. 2. The speed at which the wire changes temperature is slowed down. Because you increase the wire to wick contact area this also slows down the heat change speed as the coil is the thing heating the wick so we can assume that the wick is colder than the coil. The overall effect is the coil will stay in a certain temperature range for a longer time, i.e the temperature where you want it to be, the same wire without claptonning will heat up much faster and have less contact area with the wick (juice reservoir) which means it will go from cool to 'too fucking hot' faster....much faster.
You will see people saying that the claptonning increases the wicking properties of the coil - but its fed by essentially the same cotton wick and the coil is wider because of the claptonning so....I think that's mainly nonsense. Maybe if you were using the coil without a wick in it then it would be relevant but who does that? On top of the wick thing the coil cools down slower, so it continues to vaporise juice while you have no power going into it - so any perceived advantage of wicking due to capillary action is negated by the fact it is vaporising the juice even when its not powered. You can believe either way that you like, I doubt that any scientific research is gonna prove one or the other at any time soon.
You will also see many people say that the pre-made clapton wire which is now coming out of china is garbage...on that I have to agree. I mean it is kinda OK but they should up their game, what I have seen is usually 26Ka1 claptonned with 32 Ka1 - most builders would not do that combination out of choice. But if you like it you would ha ha - if you get some of that stuff you likely want to either build low with it or put it on a regulated mod and up the volts.
So what is better - a fused clapton or parallel clapton coils?
Only joking, it's always down to you and what you like. Luckily for me I like most things...depends which day it is
Claptonning a core wire/wires allows you to control the ramp up/down time and increases the coil to wick surface area without the need to have a huge number of wraps. It also creates a number of built in vent holes where vapour can escape from every part of the coil - it's gonna drink juice. A normal tight wound coil (commonly termed a micro coil) acts more like a tin can oven, the wires are sealing in the wick and as the wire expands with heat that will get even tighter. By changing the diameter and/or wiretype of the clapton wrap you can alter the heat up/cool down characteristics of the coil. Generally it is accepted that around 8 AWG difference is good (so 26AWG core 34AWG wraps for example). Less difference will make the coil very slow to heat up/cool off, more difference will lessen the coil mass and make hardly any difference to the characteristics of the coil. Many people control this heat flux by using different types of wire for the clapton wrap and the core maybe SS 316 core with a Ka1 wrap - the possibilities are finite
So two main things are at play with a claptonned wire 1. The wire surface area for the same number of wraps is increased. 2. The speed at which the wire changes temperature is slowed down. Because you increase the wire to wick contact area this also slows down the heat change speed as the coil is the thing heating the wick so we can assume that the wick is colder than the coil. The overall effect is the coil will stay in a certain temperature range for a longer time, i.e the temperature where you want it to be, the same wire without claptonning will heat up much faster and have less contact area with the wick (juice reservoir) which means it will go from cool to 'too fucking hot' faster....much faster.
You will see people saying that the claptonning increases the wicking properties of the coil - but its fed by essentially the same cotton wick and the coil is wider because of the claptonning so....I think that's mainly nonsense. Maybe if you were using the coil without a wick in it then it would be relevant but who does that? On top of the wick thing the coil cools down slower, so it continues to vaporise juice while you have no power going into it - so any perceived advantage of wicking due to capillary action is negated by the fact it is vaporising the juice even when its not powered. You can believe either way that you like, I doubt that any scientific research is gonna prove one or the other at any time soon.
You will also see many people say that the pre-made clapton wire which is now coming out of china is garbage...on that I have to agree. I mean it is kinda OK but they should up their game, what I have seen is usually 26Ka1 claptonned with 32 Ka1 - most builders would not do that combination out of choice. But if you like it you would ha ha - if you get some of that stuff you likely want to either build low with it or put it on a regulated mod and up the volts.
So what is better - a fused clapton or parallel clapton coils?
Only joking, it's always down to you and what you like. Luckily for me I like most things...depends which day it is
