If you’re new (or even not so new) to vaping you’ve no doubt run across the letters “PG” and “VG”. If you’re like a lot of people you may have simply skimmed over them and assumed they were marketing-related. That’s only partly true. More importantly, they indicate some of the key aspects of e-liquids that you should keep in mind every time you venture into the Smoking Buddha vape shop in Parker to stock up.
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Is MTL Vaping or STL Vaping Right for You?
If you have only recently started vaping or you are planning to start in the near future, you may be finding it hard to decide what type of device to use. There is a huge variety of vape pens, pod kits and vaporizer mods for sale in the USA today, many of which you can find at our local shop in Parker. Whilst it’s nice to have such a wide selection from which to choose, it can cause some confusion for new vapers. To make your task a little easier, we’re going to help you decide which of the two main types of vape device is most suitable for you: Mouth-To-Lung (MTL) or Direct-To-Lung (DTL) devices. Once you’ve done this, you will be able to focus on the mods and vaporizers that are most likely to meet your specific needs.
Make Vape Coils Last Longer With These Simple Rules
Whether you use a simple vape pen that was purchased online or a powerful mod that you bought from a local vape shop, you will need to buy new coils, or pods with integral coils, on a regular basis. As a coil deteriorates, it can negatively affect the flavor of your vape; it can also lead to leaks and other issues. The only way to fix these issues is to install a replacement coil but if you are new to vaping, you may have no idea how often you should be changing your coils and what you can do to extend their useful lifespan. But there’s no need to worry if this is the case: after you’ve finished reading our handy guide, you’ll be able to tell when it’s time to change coils and you’ll also know how to get the most out of each coil you install in your device.
What Are the Risks of Stealth Vaping?
At various times on this blog, we’ve alluded to or otherwise touched on the subject of stealth vaping. But we’ve never taken the time to give it the attention it deserves. And it deserves that attention because if it weren’t for their ability to stealth vape, some vape users would have a tough time vaping at all, given the hysterical, nonsensical attitude toward vaping and vaporizers that persists in much of the US, including here in Parker.
Back to Basics: What is Stealth Vaping?
Stealth vaping means vaping in a way that doesn’t attract attention. It is the definition of discreet in that even if there are people around, they won’t notice what you’re doing unless they’re staring at you like psychopaths.
In most cases, effective stealth vaping calls for small, low-power vape mods that can easily be tucked into the palm of your hand should someone walk by, or you notice one of those anti-smoking psychopaths staring at you from across the park. It also means using a high PG ejuice, (since that will produce a smaller cloud than VG), and cultivating techniques that enable you to regulate the amount of vapor you exhale so that you never release a single, obvious cloud that will attract attention.
The Risks of Stealth Vaping
There are two types of risk associated with stealth vaping. The first involves stealth vaping in a place where vaping is forbidden, and the second involves the lunatic fringe who are ever-ready to pounce the second they see anything that might resemble a puff of smoke. Let’s take first things first and look at the risks associated with vaping in forbidden places.
Even today, as study after study confirms the safety of vaping and the fact that it is not a ‘gateway’ to cigarettes for young people, the list of places you can’t vape is needlessly extensive and includes just about everywhere except your own home, and outdoors in Parker (as long as you’re 25 feet from a doorway).
That means that if you want to vape during dinner at a restaurant you’ll have to go into the bathroom. Same if you want to vape on a long international flight. You aren’t even allowed to vape in a hotel room in Colorado anymore since the 2019 Clean Air Act incorrectly equated vaping to cigarettes.
Ahem! The Risks?
Oh, right. Well, if you vape in the toilet on a plane there is a pretty good chance you’ll set off the alarm. Smoke detectors are designed to detect smoke not vapor. But if the vapor cloud is thick enough in such a tiny space it can still trigger an alarm. If you set off the alarm on a plane it will make an emergency landing and you’ll be looking at a huge fine and jail time. So we would strongly recommend you don’t ever try stealth vaping in the bathroom of an airplane.
In a restaurant bathroom, there is little chance of setting off a smoke alarm. However, if someone else in the bathroom picks up on your vapor cloud and reports you, you could be kicked out of the restaurant and fined several hundred dollars. Same if you get caught vaping in a hotel room. Although to be real, you’d have to try pretty hard to get caught vaping in your hotel room. But just to be safe you’d probably want to vape by an open window.
There might also be professional blowback – as in damaged reputation or lost job – if you get caught vaping where you shouldn’t. That’s especially true if you cause an incident on an airplane.
The Risks of Stealth Vaping: Part II
Now let’s look at the risks associated with attracting the attention of anti-smoking ‘activists’. These delightfully unhinged individuals often don’t care about science or anything else. Their sole motivation is their twisted self-serving agenda. If they see a puff, they spring into action like dung beetles assaulting a fresh pile of wildebeest sh*t. Their fervor often defies logic as they start spewing nonsense about how you’re killing them with your (harmless) vapor cloud etc, etc, blah, blah, blah.
If you’re in a place where vaping is allowed there’s no reason to yield to the demented assault. The risk here is mostly about whether you’re prepared to put up with it. Some people can take it for what it’s worth and laugh it off. Others really don’t want a crazy person getting in their face and ruining their day.
A Few Stealth Vaping Tips
Most vapers have no interest in confrontation. They just want to enjoy their ejuice in peace. That said, some see little value in openly vaping, even in places where it’s allowed, just because they want to avoid run-ins with lunatics. So they practice stealth vaping.
The good news is stealth vaping is simple. But you will need the right equipment and it will take some practice to nail your technique.
Characteristics of a Good Stealth Vaping Device
The best devices for stealth vaping are typically:
- Small – As we said earlier it should fit easily into your palm so you can conceal it from prying eyes.
- Low wattage – A low-wattage vape device will produce small vapor clouds.
- No LED light – Some devices have LED lights at the end that light up when you draw. Not good for stealth vaping.
At the Smoking Buddha, you’ll find plenty of low-wattage vaporizer mods that will empower your stealth vaping. To find us search for “vape shop near me in Parker” or just call us at (303) 840-4388.
Vaping Etiquette Guidelines for the 2022 Holiday Season
There are a lot of things to love about Thanksgiving, starting with the fact that it’s probably the most inclusive holiday on the calendar. In addition to that, you have great food, time off from work at the vape shop, a chance to reflect on the good things in life, and the chance to see all those family members you’ve been avoiding for the past year.
Vaping in England Compared to the U.S.
An estimated 50 million people are now vaping worldwide with thousands more joining their ranks every day. In the US alone that number is nearly 10 million. Despite the fact that vaping is not smoking, that flavored ejuice that contains no nicotine is not a “tobacco product” and that there is no scientific evidence linking vaporizers to the kind of health issues caused by cigarettes, the media in the US continues to use the words “vaping” and “smoking” interchangeably and rail against phantom health concerns that have no basis in fact. On the other side of the Atlantic, however, things are very different.