If you’ve been vaping for a while, you may have moved beyond the convenience store-purchased vape and pre-packaged coils. You’ve probably been exposed to the drip vs. custom coil debate.
Everyone seems to have an opinion on this. We examined the difference between the RTA tank and the RDA tank. But maybe you’re looking for somewhat that syndicates the best of both worlds?
The RDTA tank system was developed to fill this gap effectively.
What is an RDTA tank?
RDTA is an abbreviation for Rebuildable Dripping Tank Atomizer. The RTA atomizer places the tank on a buildable deck and uses a chimney to pull smoked juice into the drip cap. There is extra space between the drip cap and the coil, so you sacrifice some flavor, but you often don’t need to refill it.
RDA eliminates the tank. Instead, the drip cap is closer to the coil to get a much more direct flavor. Of course, this is a trade-off that you can carry the vaporizer with you while you are using it. This is a necessary trade-off to consider.
The RDTA fills this gap between portability and flavor by placing the construction deck above the tank. In some cases, a wicking system and a pump system are used to suck the juice directly from the tank into the coil. It can carry more e-juice at once and does not need to be refilled frequently, giving it the same portability as using an RTA tank but without losing flavor.
Basically, you can carry more juice than you lose with RDA, and you can get all the flavors from RDTA you lose from RTA.
What is the RTA?
RTA is similar to RDTA in many respects and has a tank that can carry more Vaping juice while inhaling steam. However, unlike RDTA, the build deck is under the tank and uses gravity to push the liquid into the coil. Smoke is then sucked into the drip cap through the chimney. Both the RDTA and RTA can carry the right amount of e-liquid on the go, but the chimney feature of the RTA means there’s a little more space between you and the coil.
Due to this slight difference, the flavors obtained from most RTA vaping systems are significantly reduced. Like the RDTA, most RTAs have adjustable air holes that allow you to customize the coil draw. However, as gravity pushes the liquid, RTA has more leak problems than RDTA unless you forget to close the vent. Still, leaks can occur.
Which would you like to choose?
Both have their strengths and weaknesses, but in our opinion, RDTA is better. Unlike the RTA and RDA questions, RDTA has fairly clear advantages. In the tank, the flavor increases, the risk of leakage is low, and a perfect system is all in one neat package. Quite a few people say that RDA and RDTA are very similar in many respects, and although they work on the same principle, there are differences in quality and taste.
But RDTA is not the last word from the point of view of a reconstructable atomizer. Not as severe as RDTA or RTA, but it still has its annoying flavor loss. Currently, efforts are underway to close the gap further between the flavors offered by RDA and the portability of RTA or RDTA. The so-called squonk modification is a simple pump that draws liquid directly from a colossal tank and ejects it directly into a coil.
These are the differences between the two tanks. RDTA is the best in all them because it has the mixture of both tanks, and they removed the disadvantages as much as possible. But it still depends entirely on your taste and wants, so choose wisely.
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