Thank you very much, I'll check it outThis think this write up will help: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/what-e-cigarette-coil-how-works-andy-wong-ndwce/
Welcome to AAC.When you inhale on a vape, you activate a sensor that completes the circuit. This allows the battery to send power to the coil, heating it up and vaporizing the e-liquid. The process is similar to flipping a light switch, where your inhale acts as the switch to start the flow of electricity.
Don't feed the bots.Welcome to AAC.
This explanation is so vague it doesn’t really add anything. A “sensor“ completes “the circuit”? What sort of sensor? What circuit? The light switch analogy might as well be reduced to “it gets hot because electric current appears in the coil when you suck on it”, or perhaps, “it’s like a garden hose, the valve is opened when you inhale and the water is like the electricity”.
Take a look at the article Bertus posted above, or the two linked Big Clive videos. You should always read through a thread before posting an answer that might be redundant already.
Ditto. I've found a few laying by the road and dissected them with findings like you reported. I was frankly surprised that such a small switch is controlling such a high current.In the few vapor dispensers that I have dismantled, that "sensor" looks a lot like a very small electret microphone cartridge. It is actually a small normally open vacuum switch, about 0.2 inches diameter at most. I have not taken one apart to see how they work. The power source is a small battery, often about 3 volts. I am not sure about what the battery technology is. Lithium or carbon-zinc or something else.
The really nasty danger is that long after the vapor device is discarded, thrown on the ground, there is still enough energy left to start a fire if it gets crushed so that the witch stays closed. So it could start a fire in a trash bin or a pocket or any place, if it were stepped on incorrectly. Almost as dangerous as a burning Butt tossed out of a car window.