salt nic vs freebase
Salt nic versus freebase is the single most useful thing to understand before buying bottled juice, and it comes down to matching the liquid to the device.
How salt nic vs freebase actually works.
Salt nic versus freebase is the single most useful thing to understand before buying bottled juice, and it comes down to matching the liquid to the device. Nicotine-salt e-liquid is formulated to be smooth at high strengths (25–50mg) and is made for small, low-power pod systems. Freebase e-liquid is the traditional formula — harsher per milligram, so it's sold at low strengths (3–6mg) and made for high-power sub-ohm mods that vaporize a lot more liquid per puff.
Cross them up and it goes badly both directions: 50mg salt in a sub-ohm mod delivers way too much nicotine, and 3mg freebase in a little pod feels like puffing on nothing. Bring your device in or tell us what you run — we'll put you in the right lane in about thirty seconds, then the only decision left is flavor.
The execution details that decide outcome.
Check the bottle label for 'salt' or 'salt nic' — strength alone doesn't always make it obvious at a glance.
Rule of thumb: small pod device = salt nic, big mod with airflow = freebase. When in doubt, ask.
Higher VG juice is thicker and made for sub-ohm tanks; it wicks poorly in tight pod coils.
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