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I'm going to try and make this as simple as possible, because anyone can make the switch from cigarettes to vaporizers, but sometimes the technicality of things will tend to shy people away. Basically, with a typical e-cigarette, the way it works is by utilizing simple concepts into a very effecient device. When an e-cigarette produces vapor, it's similar to a pot of boiling water on the stove. That steam coming off the water is not smoke, it's water vapor. All-natural vegetable glycerine produces a much thicker vapor than water, so that makes a good, safe base liquid. Add the food-grade flavoring and the pharmacutical grade nicotine (just a few drops of each), and you've got "e-juice". Silica wick carries this e-juice to the coil made from a piece of resistiance wire, that is wrapped around the silica wick, and when the coil heats up red, it slowly vaporizes the juice and produces our thick, delicious clouds of vapor, resembling smoke.

Types of  E-Cigarettes

Mini's, Disposables, and "Flicks"

These are usually an e-cigarette smokers first experience with an electronic cigarette. Sold at stores and markets, you see them and gain intrest, but unfortunately for most, the experience is short lived before it's back to analong cigarette smoking. Short battery life and questionable power often lead to poor experiences from users but for some people they do work. Cartomizers are usually pre-filled and use a standard "510" thread connection, but other sizes like 808 and 901 threads do exist. However, most brands and companies for all electronic cigarettes use 510 threading so your options are pretty decent with the store-bought pre-filled disposable cartomizers if you stick with a 510 thread connection. They are also good for a budget. So it wouldn't hurt to pick one of these up at your local gas station for 5-10 bucks before deciding on having us build you a larger mod. 

Fixed Battery (eGo's)

A big step up from the disposables and mini's, these fixed battery vaporizers come in all shapes, forms, and sizes. The most common however, are the "eGo series" vaporizers. Much more economical compared to a mechanical mod, but there's no replacing the battery when they're exhausted. Most have standard USB chargers, and I've seen some with Android-type charging ports. We've had eGo's last us months and months with continuous use. Paying attention to the mAh rating is important with these, as it shows you how long the battery usually lasts with each charge. Anything under 400mAh is going to need frequent charging if you plan on using it continually. We recommend these over the disposables and flicks, if you can afford the few extra dollars and your not yet ready for a full sized mechanical mod, which is why we have a selection of these fixed battery vaporizers in our store. 

Mechanical Mods- Variable Voltage

At some point in time after switching from cigarettes to vaporizers, you will have come to a decision about whether you will (A)- Go back to smoking cigarettes, or (B)- Fall in love and decide you will be vaping for the rest of your life.. or for a while at least. It is at this point in time where you will purchace your very own "mod". Some of these mods give users the advantage of completley rebuilding them from the bottom up, allowing complete control and customization. We offer custom builds and complete sets to get you started. There is a lot to learn when it comes to using a mechanical mod, and we suggest doing  plenty of research before buying one. Mechanical mods use no wires or circut boards, the current from the battery travels through the mod itself, with little to no voltage loss. Variable voltage means there's an option, sometimes digital, to control and tweak functions like volts, ohms, current, power, tempature, and air flow. Some mods are now smartphone compatable and with an app, can remotley operate and control these features. Unfortunately, big tobacco hates these things because they work, and they are trying very hard to fabricate false information and propaganda as well as pumping large sums of money into sponsoring bills to impose bans and regulations that will wipe these things off the market. Let's not let that happen. Let us build you a mod and regain your freedom from cigarettes. If they helped me quit after trying hard for 15 years with no success, then I know they can help a lot of others as well. If you have questions about a mod and are interested in more, send us a message using our message box located on the home page.

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Know The FACTS

  • E-cigarettes emit no smoke and pose no known health risks to users or nonusers. In fact, according to the American Association of Public Health Physicians, e-cigarettes likely pose "much less than 1%" of the risk of smoking.

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  • E-cigarettes have helped hundreds of thousands of American smokers to quit or sharply reduce their cigarette consumption.

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  • There are critical differences between the constituents in the vapor produced by e-cigarettes and the smoke emitted from tobacco cigarettes, cigars, pipes, and hookahs.

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  • E-cigarettes work through the process of vaporization, as opposed to smoked tobacco, which requires the process of combustion. Whereas combustion creates thousands of chemical changes, vaporization creates none. Rather, a liquid is heated just to the point of creating a physical change (vapor), much like boiled water creates steam.

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  • E-cigarette vapor is practically odorless, but even when detectable, the odor is not unpleasant and smells nothing like smoke.

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  • Any visible vapor begins to dissipate almost immediately.

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  • E-cigarettes will not cause confusion or difficulty enforcing smoking bans. Unlike tobacco cigarettes, e-cigarettes require no flame, and they produce no "sidestream" vapor/smoke, no ash and no litter. Additionally, novel colors, shapes, sizes, buttons and LED lights on e-cigarettes serve to further distinguish them from traditional cigarettes.

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  • Far from protecting public health, banning the use of e-cigarettes where smoking is prohibited causes harm. Sound public health policy surely would encourage smokers to replace or reduce their cigarette consumption—not create obstacles to it. Banning the use of e-cigarettes where smoking is prohibited sends a message to smokers that they may as well continue to smoke, whereas allowing e-cigarette use indoors provides an incentive to switch to a far safer alternative.

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  • Surveys of thousands of e-cigarette users indicate that the majority have completely replaced tobacco cigarettes with e-cigarettes, thereby dramatically reducing their health risks.

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  • Recently published studies have found that e-cigarettes pose exponentially fewer health risks than cigarettes because they emit no smoke, carbon monoxide, or airborne particulates, in addition to relieving smokers' cravings.

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  • More than a million American smokers have quit smoking or sharply reduced their cigarette consumption by switching to e-cigarettes in the past several years, and several recently published surveys indicate that e-cigarette consumers have found the products to be effective for quitting smoking and for improving respiratory

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  • Many health organizations and tobacco researchers, including the American Council on Science and Health and the American Association of Public Health Physicians, support the use of electronic cigarettes as a method of greatly reducing the harm associated with smoking.

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  • Last year, the New Zealand Ministry of Health informed its Parliamentary Health Committee that “As the e-cigarette delivers only nicotine in a mist of propylene glycol, without the other 4,000 or so other chemicals in tobacco smoke, it is far safer than smoking” and that ". . . current safety data would therefore suggest that the e-cigarette poses few risks to people, and is safer than continuing to smoke."

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  • Dr. David Baron, former Chief of Staff at UCLA Medical Center, made the following statement about e-cigarette use indoors: "All that's happening is you're heating up a liquid to the point of it becoming a vapor. So referring to it as smoke doesn't make sense at all. Therefore, considering it subject to a smoking ban doesn't really make sense, either."  http://youtu.be/pnVsVhystFw

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Dr. Brad Rodu, Professor of Medicine at the University of Louiville, has stated: “There is substantial and compelling scientific research documenting that consuming the ingredients in e-cigarettes (nicotine, propylene glycol, water and flavors) is vastly safer than burning tobacco and inhaling 3000+ toxic by-products. Claiming that e-cigarettes are dangerous for non-smokers is about as credible as claiming that air travel is dangerous for people who never set foot in an airplane.”        http://www.ecigarettedirect.co.uk/campaign/scientists-dispel-ASH-junk-science.html 

 

 

               8 Biggest Electronic Cigarette Myths

There are many myths and misconceptions about electronic cigarettes. Let's separate fact from fiction-

Myth #1 Electronic cigarettes are a threat to children/teens.

FALSE.

Where it comes from:

Legislators and anti‐smoking groups assume that children will be drawn to the “electronic gadgets,” the

fruit/candy flavors and ease of access on the internet & mall kiosks.  

Why it’s a wrong:

First, they aren’t easy to purchase on the internet. A credit card or bank account is required. So, unless the

child steals a parent’s credit card and then hides the card statement later on, the risk of being discovered is

high. The majority of kiosk vendors have already implemented a policy of forbidding sales to minors.  The

opportunity for minors to purchase electronic cigarettes at those kiosks is no better than purchasing tobacco

cigarettes at a gas station – probably less.

Second, the least expensive electronic cigarette starter kits run between $35 ‐ $50 (plus shipping) online and

$90 ‐ $150 at mall kiosks. This price point is considerable for the average adult, let alone a child. Children

would be more likely to spend that money on music, clothes or video games than an electronic cigarette –

especially when they can easily get a $7 pack of cigarettes at the corner store or from friends. Electronic

cigarettes also require the additional purchases of accessories and replacement parts. A single battery costs

over $10. Heating elements, which require frequent replacement, cost over $8 each.

Third, anecdotal accounts indicate that children/teens view electronic cigarettes as a way for adults to quit

smoking. They lack the “danger factor,” which reduces appeal. Additionally, surveys of electronic cigarette

owners show that the average consumer is overwhelmingly between 30‐50 years old and a smoker1

, indicating that even young adults do not find them particularly appealing.

Myth #2Sweet flavors and flashy packaging are intended to specifically attract young people.

FALSE.

Where it comes from:

The assumption by critics that the slick advertisements and fruity flavors only appeal to children and their lack

of knowledge of the target consumer and the intended purpose of the product.  

Why it’s wrong:

These products are not intended to be a treatment for nicotine addiction. They are intended to be a way for

current smokers to “smoke” without the dangerous toxins and carcinogens. Retailers need to differentiate

themselves from stop‐smoking aids, to convince long‐time smokers that the electronic cigarette is just as

appealing as the tobacco cigarette they currently use.  

Just as with marketing cars, televisions, cell phones, alcohol and other adult products, advertisers attempt to

make the devices appeal to adults with a “coolness factor.” Studies show that "smokers are more likely than

the general population to be risk‐taking, extroverted, defiant, and impulsive"7

 ‐ very similar to teen

demographics ‐ so the misconception is understandable, but misguided.  Often overlooked by critics in these

ads are the claims about the ability to “smoke anywhere” and have a safer/healthier option to smoking – a

clear indication that they are targeting current smokers and smokers concerned about their health and not

new/young smokers.

Regarding sweet flavors, the tobacco‐flavored liquid does not have a pleasant taste for many smokers, as it is

difficult to replicate the tobacco smoke taste. Adults, who make up the majority of electronic cigarette

consumers, specifically requested alternative flavors that would work well with the liquid base – which were

mostly sweeter fruit and candy flavors. About 50% of adult electronic cigarette owners polled (over the age of

26)1 report that they primarily use these non‐tobacco flavors and attribute them with the ability to keep them

from returning to tobacco cigarettes. They also testify that the sweeter flavors make tobacco cigarettes taste

particularly foul and further reduce their chances of returning to smoking cigarettes.

Myth #3 Electronic Cigarettes all contain anti‐freeze.

FALSE.

Where it comes from:

In 2009, the FDA released a press statement claiming that they tested electronic cigarettes and found

diethylene glycol, an ingredient in anti freeze.2

Why it’s wrong:

Independent labs extensively tested other electronic cigarettes and found no evidence of diethylene glycol,

the toxic component of anti‐freeze claimed to have been found in the brands the FDA tested.3To further the confusion, electronic cigarette liquid is made of propylene glycol, an ingredient recognized as

safe for human consumption by the FDA. While propylene glycol is sometimes used in anti‐freeze, it is an

additive intended to make it LESS harmful if accidentally swallowed.

The FDA tested just 18 cartridges, from only two companies. Out of those 18, just one tested positive for

“about 1% diethylene glycol.”4 Because so many other tests failed to find diethylene glycol, many experts

conclude that the single sample may have been contaminated in some other way. By no means is it considered

a standard ingredient in electronic cigarettes.

If electronic cigarettes did contain anti‐freeze, there would be news reports about the thousands of electronic

cigarette owners suffering from diethylene glycol poisoning and that is not the case. To date, after five years

on the market worldwide, there have been no such reports.

Myth #4Electronic cigarettes are just as deadly and carcinogenic as tobacco cigarettes.

FALSE.

Where it comes from:

The FDA stated they found trace amounts of carcinogens in the nicotine cartridges and the media and health

organizations used that statement to claim that electronic cigarettes are just as dangerous as tobacco

cigarettes.2

Why it’s wrong:

The FDA found trace amounts of “tobacco‐specific nitrosamines” in the samples they tested, which can cause

cancer under certain conditions and in sufficient amounts.4 The FDA allows certain levels of nitrosamines in

consumable products. For example, tests show that other nicotine products, such as nicotine gum and

nicotine patches, also contain the same tobacco‐specific nitrosamines. The FDA did not release any

information on the levels they found, however, the scientific definition of “trace amount” means amounts that

are “detectable,” but too small to even accurately measure.

An independent study by Dr. Murray Laugesen showed that, on average, the electronic cigarette contained

8.18ng nitrosamines per 1g of liquid. 8 ng in 1g = eight parts per trillion, an extremely tiny amount. By

comparision, nicotine gum tested at 2ng, the nicotine patch tested at 8ng and Marlborough cigarettes tested

at a staggering 11,190ng. That translates to electronic cigarettes containing 1,200 times LESS of these cancer‐

causing nitrosamines than tobacco cigarettes and about the same as the FDA‐approved nicotine patch.3

Myth #5 Electronic cigarettes may be more addictive than regular cigarettes.

FALSE.

Where it comes from:

The infamous FDA testing showed that the levels of nicotine found in the cartridges varied from the advertised

amount. Also, traces of nicotine were found in cartridges labeled as “no nicotine.” Critics claim that means

electronic cigarette users may be inhaling too much nicotine and causing them to become even more

addicted.Why it’s wrong:

Two independent tests, the one by Dr. Laugesen and one by Dr. Thomas Eissenberg at Virginia Commonwealth

University5

, showed that electronic cigarette vapor does not deliver nicotine as “efficiently” as tobacco smoke

and actually delivers nicotine in lower amounts than tobacco smoke.

Additionally, smokers tend to “self‐regulate” their intake, as seen by how many cigarettes a smoker uses in a

day. When the need for nicotine is met, the smoker – or in this case, the electronic cigarette user – no longer

has a craving and ceases consumption. The fundamental behavior of nicotine addiction just doesn’t support

the claims of increasing the addiction in that manner.

Myth #6 Second‐hand “vapor” is a threat to bystanders.

FALSE.

Where it comes from:

Anti‐smoking groups claim the toxins and carcinogens in electronic cigarettes (as well as addictive nicotine)

can be accidentally inhaled by bystanders, just like second‐hand tobacco smoke.

Why it’s wrong:

As shown previously, electronic cigarettes already contain a tiny, barely detectable fraction of the carcinogens

found in tobacco cigarettes. They also have been shown not to contain any of the toxins in the amounts found

in tobacco cigarettes and that they deliver very little nicotine in the vapor. So, given that the vapor already

proves little, if any, danger to the actual user, any danger to bystanders by the exhaled vapor would be

negligible.  

Additionally, tobacco cigarettes create “side stream smoke,” which is the smoke that comes directly from the

end of a lit cigarette and the smoke lingers in the air and travels a fair distance from the smoker.  

Electronic cigarette vapor does not behave in the same manner as tobacco smoke. There is no vapor produced

from the device, until the user activates it by inhaling, so no “side stream vapor” is created and the vapor

dissipates very quickly. In the event that a bystander would pass through the vapor, since it doesn’t contain

the irritating toxins of tobacco smoke, it would likely be barely detectable beyond the faint scent of the flavor

and only for a fleeting moment.

Myth #7 Electronic cigarettes are a “gateway” to tobacco smoking.

FALSE.

Where is comes from:

Critics theorize that more non‐smokers will be willing to try electronic cigarettes, due to their attractive flavors

and attractive styling.Why it’s wrong:

People start smoking for different reasons. Studies show that children and young adults are more influenced

by their peers, parents and stress levels than advertizing or flavors.6

  The most popular tobacco flavors among

youth are Camel, Marlborough and Newport – fruit and candy flavors only made up 2% of sales when they

were legal – and rarely do people cite the flavor as a reason they started smoking.

Considering that the electronic cigarette is perceived as a health concession for adults, the high start‐up costs

and the easy accessibility of tobacco cigarettes, electronic cigarettes are unlikely to appeal to new smokers in

significant numbers.

Additionally, given  the fact that current users claim that electronic cigarettes make tobacco smoke taste

considerably foul, in the unlikely event that a new smoker chooses electronic cigarettes over tobacco

cigarettes, the chance they will find tobacco smoking appealing is even less.

Taking into account that electronic cigarettes have been shown to be both less toxic and less carcinogenic

than tobacco cigarettes, if new smokers actually do choose electronic cigarettes over tobacco cigarettes, it

would actually benefit their health and safety and that of those around them.

Myth #8 If electronic cigarettes were no longer available for smokers, those smokers would simply quit

smoking or use traditional stop‐smoking aids.  

FALSE.   

Where it comes from:  

Wishful thinking.  

Why it's wrong:  

According to the 998 poll participants, only 18% responded that they would use traditional NRTs or attempt to

quit cold turkey. Nearly 20% said they would switch to other tobacco alternatives, such as snus or snuff; and a

whopping 61% indicated they would most likely resume smoking cigarettes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

American Council on Science and Health Agrees E- cigaretes pose NO health concerns 

Doctor explains why the truth about e-cigs is often shielded from the public

Doctors seperate fact from fiction and explain why e-cigarettes are a safe choice for smokers

Once in a while, you can even catch the the mainstream media (opionated daytime talk shows) telling the truth!

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