July 25, 2018 by Janet.
In July 2018, two innovative atomizers had come into the
electronic cigarette, one is Geekvape Creed RTA, another is Vandy Vape Capstone RDA, both of them have different ideas about air intake system. So let's talk about them in detail.
The Geekvape Creed RTA is so special because of its replaceable airflow inserts. There are 3 different kinds of replaceable airflow chamber for you to change. We've also seen in the Skyline and a few other tanks, although the Skyline still does it the best. This concept of replaceable airflow options makes the tank a whole lot more flexible to a wider range of vapers. Now a single tank or RDA can be used for cloud-chasing or a more relaxed vape. The Geekvape Creed wants to cash in on this new trend.
On the outside, I have to admit it looks pretty much like the Ammit or any other Geekvape RTA we've seen so far. The magic is really on the inside, with three airflow options.
Although the airflow is at the bottom, it's hard to call this a bottom-airflow tank. If you look closely at this picture, you can get a better idea of how the air will be fed in from the bottom, but eventually hits your coils from the side.
The airflow is encased by the top chimney section, so there should be no issue of flooding or leaks. It's a pretty ingenious solution, and all those small holes look like they are going to produce a smooth restricted vape.
The secondly is about the Vandy Vape Capstone RDA, which is a 24 mm dual-coil RDA, that can also be built in single-coil mode. We have seen squonking from the bottom, raised squonk pins, even squonking from the top in RDAs that take vertical builds. But the Capstone offers a new waterfall squonking option by channeling the e-liquid directly on top of the coils, distributing it evenly over the wick. The liquid travels through the build deck and exits through the holes that are placed on an opening midway through it. This design aims at speeding up the process of waiting for the liquid to travel from the bottom of the wick to the coils.
The main top cap of the Capstone features an interesting airflow system. The trapezoid-shaped airflow can be closed halfway horizontally, directing the air on the lower part of the coil. Or it can be closed completely on the one side for single-coil builds. On the other hand, the extra frosted PC cap has non-adjustable dual airflow and is designed with cloud chucking and dual coil builds in mind.
According to the above words, we know that both of these two
atomizers adopt different ways to change the air intake. The Creed RTA's way is more convenient, and the Capstone RDA's way is more fit for vapers who have strong hands-on skills.
So which one you like better? Tell us in the comment.