Showing posts with label eroll. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eroll. Show all posts

Thursday, October 30, 2014

Joyetech eRoll-C



Joyetech eRoll-C


Very popular and stylish mini electronic cigarette eRoll has received a new version, while retaining all the functions and some design elements, it also comes with several improvements

At first glance, the most striking change is the plastic cartridge hidden in a metal enclosure with a small window to check e-liquid, because of thath eRoll-C gets far more robust all-metal appearance, moreover, there is no frequent wear out of the cartridge. Even the eRoll-C PCC changed the design little bit, now is made of metal while maintaining a solid 1000mAh capacity it was possible to make it even more thin.

Functionally, however, eRoll-C is no different from its predecessor and still maintains a very high standard and quality. For heating it uses the same atomizers. Batteries have protection for low voltage, short circuit protection and also protects the atomizer itself. Even such a small e-cigarette can have a number of features that we were looking for at more larger models.

The basic eRoll-C kit, see, among others, charging case, which is built-in lithium battery with 1000mAh capacity. In this case there are two LED lights next to the USB port to recharge. Personal Charging Case (PCC) is intended for one complete piece electronic cigarette eRoll-C. The actual e-cigarette battery has a capacity only 90mAh, but for charging just snapped it into the case and in half an hour is fully charged. And given that in the kit there are two e-cigarettes it will not happen that you are left without an e-cigarette.
The new generation of electronic cigarettes eRoll-C does not come with revolutionary changes, or does not significantly alter your favorite e-cigarette, it just tweaks and perfects its design which already has been so successful.
Standard configuration: 
2x eRoll-C battery
2x eRoll-C Cartridge
2x eRoll-C Atomizer Cone
2x Atomizer head
1x eRoll-C PCC
1x USB Cable
1x Wall Adaptor
1x eRoll-C Manual

Dimensions 
eRoll-C PCC:
Length: 108 mm
Width: 48 mm
Thickness: 11.5 mm
Capacity: 1000mAh

eRoll-C:
Length: 93 mm
Working Voltage: 3.7V
Capacity: 90mAh
Colour: Black, Silver, Gold

Monday, December 2, 2013

Christmas 2013 Year End Sale!

Christmas Promo 2013

Another year another resolution. Give someone a chance to switch from traditional cigarette to a healthier alternative.

Monday, March 11, 2013

Michelle Rodriguez on electronic cigarette

Calling it quits: Action star Michelle Rodriguez reaches for an electronic cigarette in effort to give up smoking habit


Michelle RodriguezAfter a night of partying with the likes of Katy Perry and Diddy, actress Michelle Rodriguez didn’t opt for her usual pack of cigarettes to help her relax.
The action star appears to be looking after her health and the environment by choosing to unwind with an electronic cigarette.

Spotted leaving Robin Thicke’s birthday party at Chateau Marmont in West Hollywood on Saturday night, the 34-year-old actress looked fresh-faced and makeup-free—a suggestion that she’s started to take better care of herself and her skin by avoiding a former nasty habit.
Michelle RodriguezKnown for being in tip-top shape for her roles in films like Avatar and the Fast & Furious series, Michelle slipped into skinny grey trousers which hugged her svelte legs.
Always one for the tomboy look, she draped an oversized grey scarf over a black blazer and studded blouse, and finished off her party outfit with trendy Isabel Marant sneaker wedges.

Tucked into the back seat of a car, relieved from the party, Michelle reached for a smokeless cigarette.
The device's green tip suggests health benefits come with choosing an e-cigarette.
With no tar and no ash, the star can now smoke wherever she pleases.
Perhaps the smokeless alternative will keep Michelle looking fresh alongside her Fast & Furious 6 co-stars.
The series’ sixth installment is set to hit theatres on May 24 of this year.

Friday, March 8, 2013

Re-Stocked eGo-C and eRoll

Dear Customers,

After a long waiting, Joyetech eGo-C (Type A) and Joyetech eRoll (White,Black) has arrived and moving very fast. Place your order today before it run's out again !

Joyetech eRoll Electronic Cigarette
Joyetech eGo-C Electronic Cigarette

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Electronic cigarettes - miracle or menace?

An electronic cigarette
Electronic cigarettes do not have tar, the harmful part of a normal cigarette
The number of people using e-cigarettes in the UK is expected to reach a million this year but while some believe the electronic alternative to tobacco could help save hundreds of thousands of lives others think they normalise what looks like smoking and may be unsafe

Anyone walking into a busy pub in Manchester may well be confronted with a rather shocking sight.
At one table it looks like a group of friends are smoking, but there is no smell in the air and no ashtrays on the table. What they are using are e-cigarettes.
One of the women, Steph, says the e-cigarette has helped her to stop smoking.
"I've tried patches and inhalator's," she says. "They're a lot better because you feel like you're having a cigarette."
"They're a great idea," says another woman, Lisa. "You've got the health benefits from it and it does taste like a cigarette."

The e-cigarette comes in two parts.
In one end there is liquid nicotine, in the other a rechargeable battery and an atomiser. When the user sucks, the liquid nicotine is vaporised and absorbed through the mouth. What looks like smoke is largely water vapour.Because there is no tobacco in e-cigarettes, there is no tar and it is the tar in ordinary cigarettes that kills.

Safety concerns

“ Quote
If all the smokers in Britain stopped smoking cigarettes and started smoking e-cigarettes we would save 5 million deaths in people who are alive today”

Professor John Britton. Royal College of Physicians The e-cigarette market is growing fast. A survey by the charity Action on Smoking and Health (ASH) suggests 700,000 people in the UK were using e-cigarettes last year. The charity estimates that number will reach a million in 2013 and some medical experts see huge potential benefits.
"Nicotine itself is not a particularly hazardous drug," says Professor John Britton, who leads the tobacco advisory group for the Royal College of Physicians.
"It's something on a par with the effects you get from caffeine. "If all the smokers in Britain stopped smoking cigarettes and started smoking e-cigarettes we would save 5 million deaths in people who are alive today. It's a massive potential public health prize." There are however concerns about the safety and regulation of e-cigarettes. They can legally be sold to children. There are few restrictions on advertising. Critics say some of the adverts glamorise something that looks like smoking. Unlike patches and gum, e-cigarettes are not regulated like medicines. It means there are no rules for example about the purity of the nicotine in them.
Regulation call

So are e-cigarettes safe?

"The simple answer is we don't know," says Dr Vivienne Nathanson from the British Medical Association (BMA). "It's going to take some time before we do know because we need to see them in use and study very carefully what the effects of e-cigarettes are."

The BMA is just one of the bodies to respond to a consultation on e-cigarettes by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency. The agency is deciding whether the e-cigarettes should be licensed as a medicine and more tightly regulated. The BMA thinks they should.

“Quote
I don't think there's any difference between going for a caffeine break and having a nicotine break”
Lawrence Jones
UK Fast

"I would either take them off the shelves or I would very heavily regulate them so that we know the contents of each e-cigarette were very fixed," says Dr Nathanson. E-cigarettes are currently classed as a general consumer product and regulated by trading standards. It means they cannot contain hazardous chemicals, for example, and that the battery in them must meet EU standards. The trade association for e-cigarettes, the Electronic Cigarette Industry Trade Association, says they make no medicinal claims for their product. It is sold merely as an alternative to ordinary cigarettes.
Attempts to classify e-cigarettes as a medicinal product have been made in Holland and Germany but the industry successfully overturned the decisions in court.

Workplace etiquette
One UK based distributor, called VIP, says over stringent regulation could see them go out of business. Nonetheless Andy Whitmore, the company's marketing director, said it would "welcome regulation that ensures the product can't be sold to anyone under the age of 18".
There are many other questions. For example, should using e-cigarettes be allowed in a public place? At the offices of UK Fast - an internet storage company - employees can use them at their desk.
"It's a tricky one," says the company's chief executive officer, Lawrence Jones.
"It does look like smoking but could you stop someone from chewing a pencil or biting their nails? I don't think there's any difference between going for a caffeine break and having a nicotine break."
Other companies have banned it. But in theory electronic cigarettes can be used anywhere - on planes, trains, in hospitals.
The BMA is worried that the more people start using e-cigarettes the more it will normalise something that looks like smoking. They have called for the ban on smoking in public places to be extended to e-cigarettes.
A decision on whether the regulation of electronic cigarettes should be tightened will be made in a few weeks.


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-21406540

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Electronic cigarettes seem to work

Electronic cigarettes seem to work, psychologically and physically


An electronic cigaretteSince many of my patients have reported using electronic cigarettes to successfully stop smoking, I now recommend the devices to anyone who has tried to quit smoking cold turkey and failed.
And I think it is time that other doctors do, too.
Electronic cigarettes combine a mouthpiece, which contains liquid (including nicotine), an atomizer (which heats the liquid and turns it into vapor), a battery and an LED tip that glows like the tip of a lighted cigarette.
While early versions of the electronic cigarette date back to 1963, with a patent awarded to inventor Herbert Gilbert, the modern versions of electronic cigarettes—the basis for big brands in the industry, such as LOGIC and Blu—were introduced at the beginning of this century.
Dr electronic cigarette The reason my patients tell me electronic cigarettes work better than the patch or nicotine gum is that they simulate the act of smoking, but not perfectly.  They are good enough to substitute for real cigarettes, but they aren’t good enough to become an addiction, in and of themselves.  An analogy in the arena of food addiction would be something low calorie that fills you up enough to prevent bingeing on sweets, gives you some distance from that addiction, but then becomes forgettable, because it isn’t really all that compelling.
It is, of course, imperative that the electronic cigarette be a good-enough fake.  And, on this count, LOGIC seems to have a slight psychological advantage, given what patients tell me is a very realistic smoking experience—but not too realistic, as noted above.  Interestingly enough, the LOGIC brand seems to be the best-selling one in New York City, perhaps because of these factors.
There is certainly controversy about whether electronic cigarettes are harmless.  Critics note that they do, of course, contain nicotine (which is the whole idea, after all).  And critics have also found other substances in the vapor released by electronic cigarettes—even cancer-causing substances, but in tiny, tiny amounts that proponents of the devices claim would have no negative effect on well-being at all.
What no one seems to argue about is that electronic cigarettes—from LOGIC or Blu or any leading brand—are not nearly as dangerous as smoking real cigarettes.  LOGIC claims its device avoids 4,000 toxins that are found in cigarettes.
Given my experiences and those of numerous clinicians I have spoken with, it would seem to be a good time to conduct large scale clinical trials in which patients who smoke are given electronic cigarettes by their doctors, encouraged to use them and then quizzed on their use of real tobacco weeks and months and years later.  If the data generated support the product, then it may be wise for medical insurance companies to offer electronic cigarettes to smokers for free.  My bet is they would save lots of money—from the costs of treating heart disease and cancer—down the road.
Dr. Keith Ablow is a psychiatrist and member of the Fox News Medical A-Team. Dr. Ablow can be reached at

http://www.foxnews.com/health/2013/01/30/electronic-cigarettes-seem-to-work-psychologically-and-physically/

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

E-Cigarettes Pose No Risk of Heart Disease


eRollElectronic cigarettes used by smokers who want to kick the habit show no connection to heart disease, according to a study that adds to evidence of health benefits of switching from tobacco to smokeless alternatives.

E-cigarettes, electronic tubes that simulate the effect of smoking by producing nicotine vapor, prompted no adverse effects on cardiac function in the study, researchers from the Athens- based Onassis Cardiac Surgery Center said in a report presented at the European Society of Cardiology annual meeting in Munich today.

Investigators examined the heart activity of 20 young daily smokers after one ordinary cigarette against 22 people who smoked an electronic cigarette for 7 minutes. Whereas tobacco smokers showed “significant” disruptions of functions such as heartbeats or blood pressure, the effect of e-cigarettes on the heart was minimal, Konstantinos Farsalinos, one of the researchers, said in the presentation.

“Currently available data suggest that electronic cigarettes are far less harmful, and substituting tobacco with electronic cigarettes may be beneficial to health,” Farsalinos said.

Previous studies have found that the electronic devices would have to be smoked daily for four to 12 months to achieve the levels of nitrosamines, a carcinogen, that are present in a single tobacco cigarette, the researchers said. Industrywide e- cigarette sales this year are likely to double from $250 million in 2011, according to UBS AG.

Psychological Effects
Electronic cigarettes, which mimic the look and feel of traditional versions without generating smoke and ash, are one of the few smoking alternatives that provide users with their chemical need for nicotine and reproduce the psychological effect of holding and smoking a cigarette, the researcher said.

Makers of the battery-powered devices include Lorillard Inc. (LO), a Greensboro, North Carolina-based producer of standard cigarettes, which acquired Blue Ecigs for $135 million in April. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has yet to impose rules on the testing and production of e-cigarettes.

About 2.5 million people use e-cigarettes in the U.S., according to an estimate by the Tobacco Vapor Electronic Cigarette Association.

Although nicotine is present in the devices’ vapor, it is absorbed by the blood at a far slower rate than tobacco smoke, accounting for the lower levels of toxicity, Farsalinos said. No traces of nitrosamine were found in the e-cigarettes in the study, he said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Mehreen Khan in London at mkhan108@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Phil Serafino at pserafino@bloomberg.net

Monday, January 14, 2013

Staying clean and green!

 Leonardo DiCaprio lights up an electronic cigarette to get his nicotine fix on film set


He reportedly tried to help friend Robert Pattinson quit smoking at the end of last year.
And Leonardo DiCaprio is seemingly becoming an expert at quitting the bad habit himself as he was spotted puffing on an electronic cigarette on the set of his new movie.
The actor – who is filming The Wolf of Wall Street – could be seen with the nifty device in his hand as he sat inside an eatery in East Harlem, New York.

Leonardo DiCaprio electronic cigarette


Leo seemed in good spirits in between recording scenes at Rao's Restaurant, smiling as he got his nicotine fix in a healthier way than using a normal cigarette. The star happily blew out rings of smoke between takes while filming on his last day for new movie.
The 38-year-old was dressed in a suit which he wore a blue shirt and red tie under.
He also hung on to the electronic cigarette as he traipsed the streets in the more casual ensemble of loose blue jeans and a maroon jumper.

Enjoying the motions

Hopefully his Twilight star friend has had the same will power with trying to give up the bad habit himself.
Robert has been close with him since Leo reached out following his Kristen Stewart cheating scandal, asking if he wanted to party.
He was also seen smoking the same thing last May on the set of DJango Unchained.

LeonardoLeonardo donned a suit with a blue shirt

Unfortunately for him, he plays the role of chain-smoking villain Calvin Candie in the Quentin Tarantino film so it must have been a hard battle between tasting the real thing.
DiCaprio plays a deranged plantation owner in the movie which is about a man trying to rescue his wife from the hands of Leo’s character.
It also stars other big names including Samuel L. Jackson, Sacha Baron Cohen and Kurt Russell.



Wednesday, January 9, 2013

White eRoll and eVic is available!

Hi Vapors!

White eRoll and eVic is available right now. Grab yours today while stock last!!

white eroll e cig
 evic

Regards,
Digital Vapor