Spare Parts – What Are They in Vaping?

Definition

Spare Parts are replacement components that keep your vape device running safely and efficiently. Just like a car needs new tyres or oil filters, vaporisers rely on consumable and breakable elements—coils, O-rings, glass tubes, drip tips, battery wraps, screws, gaskets and pod cartridges—that wear out through daily use. Stocking spare parts means you can restore flavour, prevent leaks, maintain battery safety and avoid the frustration of a dead device when shops are closed. For Australian vapers, local nicotine prescription laws make device uptime critical; having the right replacement parts on hand ensures uninterrupted vaping without rushed shipping or customs delays.

Technical Details

Most spare parts are precision-engineered to match specific tank, pod or mod models. Coils come in resistances ranging from 0.1 Ω (Sub-Ohm) to 1.8 Ω (mouth-to-lung), manufactured with Kanthal, stainless-steel, nickel or mesh strips. Glass sections are measured in millimetre height and diameter—common sizes are 24 mm, 28 mm and 30 mm—and may be straight or bulb (bubble) profile to increase capacity to 7 ml while remaining compliant with Australian 2 ml import limits when shipped empty. O-rings are classified by inner diameter, outer diameter and thickness (e.g., 10 mm × 12 mm × 1 mm) and are made from heat-resistant silicone or fluorinated rubber. Pod cartridges integrate coil, wick and 2 ml reservoir; magnetic connection pins are gold-plated for conductivity. Squonk Mod spare bottles are typically 7 ml–10 ml food-grade silicone with 8 mm bore and stainless-steel cap. Always check compatibility charts—threads, 510 pins and airflow inserts vary between brands.

Usage & Tips

Buy coils in 5-packs and replace every 5–20 ml of e-liquid or when flavour drops. Prime new coils with liquid and let sit 5 min to avoid dry hits. Keep a small tackle box labelled with part numbers so you don’t confuse similar O-rings; a tiny difference can cause leaks. Inspect battery wraps for nicks—rewrap immediately to prevent Short Circuit Protection trips or venting. When travelling within Australia, carry spare glass in a hard case; airport pressure changes crack tanks. If a Sub-Ohm tank’s top cap threads strip, a £2 screw set saves replacing the entire £40 tank. Steeping new rubber parts in warm water removes factory taste. Finally, recycle spent coils and pods at local e-waste centres—never bin lithium cells.

History & Context

Early 2009 cig-a-likes were sealed units; once the battery died the whole device was binned. The 2011 shift to rebuildable atomisers and user-replaceable coils created the first aftermarket for Spare Parts. Today, every Kit“>Starter Kit ships with an accessory bag of O-rings and coils, reflecting the industry’s move toward sustainable, repairable hardware that complies with Australian consumer-guarantee laws.

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