After years in the world of vaping, indirectly and unexpectedly, many of us have become experts in the art of building coils with various types of wraps in every shape, model, and size.
Actually, such skills are indeed very necessary, but looking ahead, these skills will be overshadowed by new breakthroughs from companies if not honed.
Jaybo's Notchcoil wants you to believe that the time for coil innovation has arrived. The company calls their new design revolutionary, and it's not far from previous coils.
Unlike almost all other metal coils, the notchcoil uses no wound wire at all. It is made from milled and cut 316L stainless steel plating, allowing for direct temperature control or wattage power.
The design is built to work in the Theorem tank, an interesting RTA, but there are also standalone notchcoils that will fit any RDA that can accept an impressive 5.5mm thickness, simply by adding enough cotton.
If you use a Joyetech Cuboid mini or Cubis, you can buy ready-made notchcoil heads. That was a smart move by Joyetech, which started this design from the beginning. Not to mention, what makes this interesting is the price, which is comparable to other pre-built coils on the market.
Advantages of Notchcoil
So, what's so great about the notchcoil? Jaybo promises everything your weary vaper heart desires. Vaping comfort is the answer, including no burnt taste & dry hit, excellent flavor and vapor production, and unmatched durability.
Perhaps for some vapers, these claims are a bit exaggerated, but not too much so. But on the other hand, this is great innovation and technology.
The first trial consisted of a NotchCoil set used in the Wismec Theorem. As a result, the smoothness produced by the NotchCoil impressed everyone, and that smoothness would be a constant treat throughout the testing.
The Theorem holds less liquid than most other tanks, averaging 2ml, but the wide-open airflow design seemed to match the coil perfectly.
The flavor that emerged was rich, although the claim that the NotchCoil produces as much flavor as a Clapton coil failed; instead, the flavor was rich, but not that rich. Consider it one step below a Clapton.
Next, the NotchCoil found its way into an RDA, namely the 25mm Goon. This provided several lessons. First, when Jaybo said the coil was meant to work below 70 watts, they meant it.
In fact, 70 watts is quite a lot, a slight burnt taste accompanied every draw. A single coil truly performed at 60 watts, and at 50 watts, the vapor produced was not as much as with a dual coil.
To be more perfect, insert two coils, and run at 100 watts, then the NotchCoil works beautifully.
The vapor production was indeed very impressive. However, the NotchCoil will not compete with a three-20 gauge competition coil setup, but for everyday vaping, the NotchCoil is truly great, because it gives you something no other coil can match: efficiency.
There's a little physics at play here. You'll notice that the NotchCoil is lightweight, significantly lighter than similar diameter wraps made with stainless wire. This is a good thing.
Because the NotchCoil uses a metal plate, instead of wound wire, it can give you the same surface area but has to heat up less mass.
This saves battery power, and means that a single NotchCoil produces a very similar amount of vapor to a typical hand-wound coil at around 80 watts.
Dropping from 80 watts to 60 watts means you can reduce power consumption by up to a quarter, and your battery will thank you for it. You can easily swap or charge batteries less often.
The NotchCoil never failed in any way, so we cannot argue about its reliability or consistency either. The resulting resistance was 0.24 ohms, one-hundredth off the advertised 0.23 ohms, and never wavered, even when the coil was removed from one system and connected to another.
Great technology indeed. As a distinct product, the NotchCoil clearly works best in medium power settings around 50 to 60 watts, especially with the Theorem tank.
There are many vapers looking for something like this, those who need consistently good performance with little hassle at a reasonable price. They are not for cloud chasers or flavor chasers, but that is a niche market.
We wish the Theorem had more liquid, but it's better to refill than to miss out on the incredible performance and longer battery life you get from using this setup.
As a concept, the NotchCoil design could be as revolutionary as it claims over time. You can easily imagine Jaybo developing his idea, creating a 20-watt coil for beginners and a 120-watt coil for cloud chasers that will put the competition to shame. The milled steel design makes unusual high-surface forms easy for mass production.
The NotchCoil design, like every other product aimed at the vaping public, must undergo government testing to remain on the market.
Hopefully, those regulations will be changed, or Jaybo can find a way to pay for that testing, because the NotchCoil provides a better and more accessible vaping experience to non-smokers in the future.
Conclusion
So, that concludes this article. Hopefully, an article like this can be new insight for you vapers. Of course, if you want to share and gain more insight about vaping, you can directly visit the nearest Vapeboss retail store.
There, you will be assisted by our Vaporista and given a lot of information about the world of vaping, and also, if you are short on vape supplies and find it difficult to buy them due to rainy conditions, you can contact our retail WA for purchases with a COD system.
Because, Vapeboss has been the most complete and trusted vape store since 2014, so whatever your vape needs are, they will definitely be available there.
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