How to Choose the Best Juice for Your Coil Type
If you want to have good taste without burning the core, you need a useful juice guide. There are two core things: clearly seeing the liquid ratio of e-liquid (more like “fluidity/consistency”) and matching it with coil compatibility (atomizer core matching). Once you straighten this line, there will be much less oil leakage and dry burning.
| Dimensions | Traditional method (relying on feeling) | The next generation method (juice guide based on liquid ratio) |
|---|---|---|
| Judgment method | “Does this oil look thick?” | First look at VG/PG, then look at the oil inlet hole and resistance of the atomizer core to determine coil compatibility. |
| stability | Large fluctuations Sense of stability: 45% | More controllable Sense of stability: 85% |
| Risk of burnt core | On the high side Risk: 70% | significantly reduced Risk: 30% |
| Oil leakage probability | Depend on luck Probability: 60% | more stable Probability: 25% |
| decision speed | Slow trial and error Efficiency: 40% | Rules are fast Efficiency: 88% |
You can think of the “current ratio” as the entry-level liquid ratio: compare “the current available fuel supply capacity” with “how much fuel the atomizer core needs now.” When the fuel supply capacity is greater than the demand, your pumping will be more stable. On the other hand, the atomizer core is like a person running on an empty stomach, it is easy to get burnt.
“”Quick ratio” corresponds to a stricter liquid ratio idea: you only count cash-based fuel supply. You don’t expect the inventory to be liquidated in a second, and similarly, you don’t expect very thick VG to pass through the cotton immediately. This method is particularly useful for coil compatibility, because it is closer to “can you keep up with the current bite?”
Example A: If you calculate that the current ratio is approximately equal to 2.1:1, indicating that the “available resources” are enough to cover short-term needs, and it is generally more reassuring to smoke. Example B: If you calculate that the fast ratio is approximately equal to 1.67:1, indicating that the part that can supply fuel most immediately is also relatively sufficient, and the atomizer core is less likely to starve.
Many people regard high VG as an upgrade. Really it’s just a swap: the smoke is thicker, but flows slower. If your coil compatibility is “fine-pore cotton core”, high VG will be like drinking milkshake through a straw. You can drink it but it is difficult. The advice from this juice guide is simple: the smaller the device, the more closed it is, and the less likely you are to blindly chase high VG.
The same bottle of oil is thinner in summer and thicker in winter. As the power increases, the atomization speed increases, which means the “demand” increases. So you feel like the oil suddenly becomes incompatible. Don’t rush to change brands. Turn the power back a little first, and then see if the oil leakage and dry burning are improved.
When the cotton in the new atomizer core is not completely filled with oil, the phenomenon you will see will be very similar to “insufficient liquid ratio”. You can think of it as if the system has just booted up. The method is also very simple: let it sit for a while, then warm it up with low power for a few puffs, and then smoke it normally. By doing this, coil compatibility often improves immediately.
Remember this sentence: Use liquid ratio for judgment, coil compatibility for implementation, and juice guide for long-term stability.
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