Become a Patron!

wattage RANGE for .5 subohm tank (Innokin Sub G) on a EVIC VT

badmamjam

Member For 4 Years
Member For 3 Years
Member For 2 Years
Member For 1 Year
Hi. Looking for a wattage range I can use for a .5 kanthal coil in a subohm tank (Innokin Sub G) on a temp-controlled mod (EVIC VT). Of course, I can't use the temp-control mode with a Kanthal wire, but it will let me adjust the wattage. I am looking for a range so that I can save $ on juice by burning it slower.

It is supposed to automatically adjust the ohms, but I want to know how to confirm the ohms are correct for that wattage. Could I use an ohms calculator for that?

Thanks very much in advance.
 

Dark Laughter

Member For 4 Years
Member For 3 Years
It's really just a preference thing the User Manuel says For Kanthal wire whose resistance range is 0.25-1.0 ohm the output wattage can reach to 60W for Kanthal wire whose resistance range is 0.15-0.24 the actual output wattage can reach to 50W-55W so Sadly all I can add to this is I do 0.20- 0.25 ohm and run mine at 35.5W-45W (most of the time).
 

badmamjam

Member For 4 Years
Member For 3 Years
Member For 2 Years
Member For 1 Year
Thanks, Jim. I'll check it out on the coil.
 

badmamjam

Member For 4 Years
Member For 3 Years
Member For 2 Years
Member For 1 Year
Although I'm new to this, I'm loving my isub too. I was surprised how many clouds I could get compared to an Arctic I was using. ANd I will double-check those ohms on the coil.
 

Joshua Iles

Gold Contributor
Member For 4 Years
Member For 3 Years
For me on the isub 20 watts is about right, it can do up to 35 but it gets dry hits rather frequently IMHO. Around 20 is good for meme.
 

DevAuto

Gold Contributor
Member For 4 Years
ECF Refugee
Reviewer
Vape Media
If you are looking to save $$ on juice by not burning through it so quickly, then you might want to consider a different tank, maybe something like the Nautilus or RTA like a Kayfun/Russian. The problem is that sub ohm tanks are designed to blow really big clouds, and it takes juice to produce the vapor necessary to do that. All of the sub ohm tanks on the market are going to suck a LOT more juice than a traditional style tank or RTA. If you are sold on Subtanks, then play around with your wattage and see how low you can go ... that should help a bit.

HTH!
 

badmamjam

Member For 4 Years
Member For 3 Years
Member For 2 Years
Member For 1 Year
If you are looking to save $$ on juice by not burning through it so quickly, then you might want to consider a different tank, maybe something like the Nautilus or RTA like a Kayfun/Russian. The problem is that sub ohm tanks are designed to blow really big clouds, and it takes juice to produce the vapor necessary to do that. All of the sub ohm tanks on the market are going to suck a LOT more juice than a traditional style tank or RTA. If you are sold on Subtanks, then play around with your wattage and see how low you can go ... that should help a bit.

HTH!
Thanks. I had an Arctic and was not impressed at all. I don't want big clouds, but that was ridiculously low. Even with the vents all the way open and a vent on my drip tip, it took way too much suction to get much. Are there different versions of the Nautilus?
 

Joshua Iles

Gold Contributor
Member For 4 Years
Member For 3 Years
Yeah there's a full size Nautilus and a Nautilus mini. Another option is the aspire Triton with the 1.8 coils, but it still may be a juice hog.
 

VU Sponsors

Top