maiamly
Postman
- Joined
- Feb 4, 2017
- Messages
- 64
I have been mixing my little bottles of potion for a year before I discovered there are online communities where diyers can share ideas and techniques with other diyers near and far. One of the most widely shared idea among the diy community is that it is easier to mix by weight, and I cannot wrap my head around that concept. I don't see the convenience in having to determine the g/ml for PG, VG, and nicotine, so you can determine how many grams you need to achieve your desired percentages. When its all said and done, you will have a 30, 60, 120 MILLILITER bottle of juice. The difference? Mixing buy weight is like going around your elbow to get to your ass. 1ml of PG is 1 ml of PG. Who cares how many grams it takes when the end result will still be ml? Unless you guys do it differently, no one I know talks about how many grams of juice they made or bought. You stary talking about grams and ounces you have, you are referring to a completely different product. Then, it gets further complicated when you factor in the flavor concentrates. Some have PG, some VG. Some contain H2O, or ethanol, some have both, but at what quantity? How much ethanol evaporated when you set the bottle down to break up the toddler fight going on under the kitchem table? Who knows? Even more complicated when you have to account for the various compounds used to create each individual flavor. Is anyone familiar with diatomaceous earth? Fill up a liter container with it, cover and pick the container up. Guarantee you will swear that it is empty, even if you filled it yourself. It has virtually no density. Take that same container and fill it with salt and I bet you will notice the difference. Take what we have seen here, the same volume occupied by different substances can have drastically different densities, and apply that to the flavor compounds, each unique compound will have its own density. Refering back to the DE and salt, where 1 g NaCl might be a few ml, to get 1 g DE you will need a lot more ml. Therefore, assigning a general 1mg=1ml in regards to concentrates is not accurate. Yes, I have flavors that even being off by a drop or two will completely alter the overall outcome. Not to mention, natural flavors are far more complex than artificial and contain "contaminants" that will vary from batch to batch for various reasons, where the flavor was derived from, what it was exposed to, what was in the soil the plant was growing in...etc. With so many factors and some of them being unknowns, we add dificulty to what should have been a simple and easy process. Then, we add the scale in the mix. I'm sure everyone has and/or knows someone who has a scale in their bathroom. And you know you sure do get up on it every time you see one. And every time you do, you get something different, sometimes even completely off. Then you are left to wonder, who's is off? Yours, or theirs? Both? Who knows, it was $35 on amazon. I can't speak for everyone, I am sure there are exceptions, but from what I have seen, most people look for the cheapest option available and click that buy it now button, and have complete faith that the $15 piece of cheap tin foil and plastic screws will accurately calculate 0.02g. I will stop here....
Now, for what most view as overly complicated, volume.
I want 60ml 80/20 and 3% nicotine with 10% flavor.
I get my syringes out, and my bottle.
Gather the necessary ingredients.
Pull up 6ml pg and dump it into my bottle.
Mix my flavors accordingly, I have 6ml total added to my bottle.
Pull up 1.8ml of 100mg/ml nicotine and dump it into the bottle.
Since I am mixing directly into my 60ml bottle, i knnow from here I can top it off with the vg or measure the 46.2ml needed to achieve a 60ml bottle.
No extra equipment. No extra unnecessary math equations. No added frustrations that my scale timed out because life happened and I had to step away and, unless I know the weight of the bottle I am using, I have to start over because my scale reset its calibration. When I come back, there will still be 3ml in my syringe, and 12.7ml in my bottle.
I have asked others why they mix by weight, and every single one has responded the same. They don't want to clean up a mess. A few syringes? Seriously? My bottle is done and I have my "mess" cleaned up before you figure your math out.
If we were all the same, this world would be a boring place for sure. So, which is your preferred method? Do you go around your elbow to get to your ass, or straight to it?
Now, for what most view as overly complicated, volume.
I want 60ml 80/20 and 3% nicotine with 10% flavor.
I get my syringes out, and my bottle.
Gather the necessary ingredients.
Pull up 6ml pg and dump it into my bottle.
Mix my flavors accordingly, I have 6ml total added to my bottle.
Pull up 1.8ml of 100mg/ml nicotine and dump it into the bottle.
Since I am mixing directly into my 60ml bottle, i knnow from here I can top it off with the vg or measure the 46.2ml needed to achieve a 60ml bottle.
No extra equipment. No extra unnecessary math equations. No added frustrations that my scale timed out because life happened and I had to step away and, unless I know the weight of the bottle I am using, I have to start over because my scale reset its calibration. When I come back, there will still be 3ml in my syringe, and 12.7ml in my bottle.
I have asked others why they mix by weight, and every single one has responded the same. They don't want to clean up a mess. A few syringes? Seriously? My bottle is done and I have my "mess" cleaned up before you figure your math out.
If we were all the same, this world would be a boring place for sure. So, which is your preferred method? Do you go around your elbow to get to your ass, or straight to it?