Monday 10 June 2013

E-liquid like popular tobacco brands. Roll up tobacco flavoured and cigarette flavoured.

https://vapeiq.co.uk/

A popular e-liquid website that provide tobacco like e-liquids for light to heavy smokers a like. The e-liquid is popular with roll up tobacco smokers and cigarette smokers and flavours that are very similar to well known brands currently on the market today.

With free post and packaging and available in four popular bottle sizes you wont find prices and quality that you will find on https://vapeiq.co.uk/




Thursday 2 May 2013

Common Courtesy

One of the reasons why some people consider switching to e-cigarettes is because many cities and states have instituted public smoking bans. In some cases, these bans are so restrictive that it practically feels illegal to light up anywhere at all except in some cramped closet in your home. Since e-cigarettes don’t produce smoke, many people reason that they can use their e-cigarettes wherever they like. In fact, e-smoking is something of a gray area; in many places, e-cigarettes aren’t specifically covered by e-smoking bans. If you live in one of these places, you can theoretically use your e-cigarette in public without worrying about the repercussions. However, there are a few points you may want to consider first.

E-Liquid Ingredients and Safety

Many people switch to e-smoking because they believe that e-cigarettes could be safer than real cigarettes. Although some of the information available seems to suggest that e-cigarettes actually could be safer, it’s not a sure thing. One of the reasons is the sheer variety of flavors used in e-liquids and the fact that few — if any — of those flavors have been tested for safety when inhaled.

For example, it was found not too long ago that some e-liquids contained diacetyl. Diacetyl is accepted as a safe substance to consume — it’s the substance that allows low-fat microwave popcorn to taste buttery. However, when inhaled in large quantities it can lead to irreversible lung damage. Most e-liquid makers have taken steps to make sure their products contain no diacetyl, but it serves as an example of why you should always obtain as much information as possible about what your e-liquid contains.

In addition, some e-liquids contain extracts of real tobacco. You may see the term “tobacco absolute” used in conjunction with these types of e-liquids. Tobacco absolute is a pure, thick extract that tastes bitter and ashy. It can add greatly to the complexity and depth of an e-liquid. It is unknown whether the use of a real tobacco extract makes an e-liquid more dangerous to use.

E-liquid Beginners Guide

So, you're a newbie and you want to get started vaping but you don't know how. So let's take a look at a few different questions that are most common amongst those new to the world of E-cigarettes.

PG versus VG
There are basically two different fluids you can use to dilute full strength nicotine juice. These are PG (propylene glycol) as well as VG (vegetable glycerin). One of the most common questions asked is. Which one should you use, and which is safer to inhale?

Both VG and PG are used in a variety of foods that you consume on a daily basis, and are deemed quite safe. However, in some small cases, people have experienced allergic reactions to propylene glycol, the most common is skin rash. However this is not a big deal and there is nothing a little bit of skin moisturizer cannot solve.

So which is better, VG or PG? The answer is? neither. you will need both in most cases, to get the best of both worlds. Some prefer vaping VG-only and some 100% PG-only liquids, but I honestly think a combination works best. Here is the reason why.

Advantages of PG
PG liquid tends to give you a better throat hit and a lot more flavor. VG on the other hand, allows your atomizer to produce a lot more vapor. Now, VG is a thicker and more sticky fluid, and although most people do not show signs of allergy with VG, there are minority groups who complain about having phlegm buildup in their throats. The more VG juice you use, the less of a throat hit you're going to get. That's the general idea.

As mentioned before, this can be overcome with a higher nicotine strength juice as well as a higher voltage e-cigarette or a low resistance atomizer.

Most people really get into vaping and mixing their own E juices tend to use a mix of both PG and VG in particular ratios, such as 70% PG/30% VG. This is the optimum ratio for most each uses as it provides a nice throw hit, good flavor as well as tons of vapor production. I personally preferred the 50/50 mix. I find that going with 30% VG reduces the flavor of my e-juices considerably. But don't forget, you can also offset this with a low resistance atomizer (or atty) to increase the amount of flavor.

Buying Pre-made E-Juices
Lots of places sell juices these days and more and more juice retailers are sprouting up every couple of months or so. This is good for us ex-smokers because that means we have more varieties of e-juice to choose from. More competition in the market equals cheaper e-liquids for us consumers.

Although of the renown retailers of e-liquid are based in the USA, and China, there are also some very good companies in Canada as well as the UK .

Expect to pay about USD $15 for a bottle of 30 ml pre-made juice, and add a little on top of that for shipping costs. A lot of these sellers will ship internationally depending on which country you reside in. Some have given up on international shipping due to the customs issues in various countries where the sale of electronic cigarettes are banned.

Mixing Your Own
Once you get the hang of things, you'll probably want to start experimenting and having fun with mixing your own flavors as well as nicotine levels. What flavors and nicotine combinations you use will depend on your personal tastes, so there isn't really a recipe for this.

To get started with this, what you will want to do is to buy some unflavored nicotine juice from an online retailer (preferably 100 mg), along with some flavor doublers and mix them to create your personal favorite e-liquid.

Unflavored Nicotine & E-Cig Bans
Just a quick note about this. Some countries like Australia and Japan have banned the sale of nicotine juice within the country, while other countries like Singapore and Thailand have banned the sale of e-cigarettes altogether.

In Australia for instance, all e-juice retailers only sell zero level nicotine juices. You can buy zero nicotine flavored juices, as well as e-cig devices or PV's (personal vaporizers) as we call them, but you won't be able to get your hands on any nicotine within the country. So you will have to import your juices in from overseas.

Quitting Smoking
Speaking from personal experience and talking to people in the vaping community,  electronic cigarettes do help you quit smoking analogue cigarettes very easily in fact. Some people like myself just enjoy smoking a lot so we don't want to actually stop smoking, we just want to keep up the habit without the having any side-effects to our health.

If you're thinking of using e-cigs as a nicotine replacement therapy, then start with a nicotine juice strength to suit your needs, then lower the milligrams as times goes on to ween yourself off it altogether.

Wednesday 1 May 2013

Electronic cigarettes - miracle or menace?

Electronic cigarettes - miracle or menace?

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 inhalators," 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

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.


"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.



E-liquid news

Other E-Liquid News

According to Cancer Research UK, "For a smoker, the health hazards of continuing to smoke greatly outweigh any potential risks of using nicotine replacement therapy".
A recent Greek study found that e-cigarettes are no threat to the heart. Dr. Konstantinos Farsalinos of the Onassis Cardiac Surgery Center in Athens told the annual meeting of the European Society of Cardiology that "Electronic cigarettes are not a healthy habit but they are a safer alternative to tobacco cigarettes. ... Considering the extreme hazards associated with cigarette smoking, currently available data suggest that electronic cigarettes are far less harmful and substituting tobacco with electronic cigarettes may be beneficial to health."

Farsalinos and his team examined the heart function of 20 young smokers before and after smoking one tobacco cigarette against that of 22 e-cigarette users before and after using the device for seven minutes. While the tobacco smokers suffered significant heart dysfunction, including raised blood pressure and heart rate, those using e-cigarettes had only a slight elevation in blood pressure.

 The Greek clinical study was the first in the world to look at the cardiac effects of e-cigarettes. Another small study, also in Greece, reported earlier in 2012 the devices had little impact on lung function.

A report from a UK Government advisory unit favoured the adoption of "smokeless nicotine cigarettes" over the traditional "quit or die" approach, believing this would save more lives.
While electronic cigarettes may deliver nicotine to the user in a manner similar to that of a nicotine inhaler, no electronic cigarette has yet been approved as a medicinal nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) product or subjected to the necessary clinical testing for such approval. Doubts have even been raised as to whether electronic cigarettes actually deliver any substantial amount of nicotine.

Research carried out at the University of East London on the effects of using an electronic cigarette to reduce cravings in regular tobacco smokers showed that there was no significant reported difference between smokers who inhaled vapour containing nicotine and those who inhaled a placebo vapour containing no nicotine. The report concluded that although electronic cigarettes can be effective in reducing nicotine-related withdrawal symptoms, the nicotine content does not appear to be of central importance, and other smoking related cues (such as taste or vapour resembling smoke) may account for the reduction in discomfort associated with tobacco abstinence in the short term.


Though some manufacturers have marketed electronic cigarettes as an alternative to smoking cigarettes, the World Health Organization has stated they know of no evidence confirming these claims.

In an online survey from November 2009 among 303 smokers, it was found that e-cigarette substitution for tobacco cigarettes resulted in reduced perceived health problems when compared to smoking conventional cigarettes (less cough, improved ability to exercise, improved sense of taste and smell).

Trace amounts of 'volatile organic compounds', namely formaldehyde, as well as traces of ketones, mercury and tetramethylpyrazine, have been found in electronic cigarette vapour, but the quantities are significantly smaller than the quantities found in tobacco smoke and do not pose a significant health risk.

 

Tuesday 30 April 2013

Liquid Tobacco e-liquid in popular strengths and sizes. Liquid Tobacco e-juice and smoke juice.

Tobacco E Liquid Flavour, is a flavouring for e liquids. This tobacco e-liquid is an RY4 tobacco, it is a smooth and mellow tobacco taste, with subtle caramel and vanilla notes. It is a quality food grade flavour, made to the highest standards in the USA. This e liquid flavour is high quality FDA approved and contains only pure flavourings and propylene glycol. It is water soluble, so should not clog up the atomiser on your e cigarette.

This is tobacco flavour that resembles 555 and RY4 tobacco e liquid flavour. It is a pretty strong, so only small quantities required. It has been described to have a pleasant sweet tobacco aroma, with some hint of nutty and caramel notes. 

One of our newest range of popular tobacco e-liquid and we hope that you enjoy!
Enjoy the liquid 

Marlboro e-liquid in popular strengths and sizes. Marlboro e-juice and smoke juice.

Marlboro cigarette e Juice flavoured e-liquid  tastes just like Marlboro cigarettes. Our new Marlboro eliquid has already received some great reviews and these will be added to the website shortly. If you have smoked Marlboro cigarettes in the past, then you will love our representation of it.
One of our newest range of popular cigarette e-liquid ready and available for you, and we hope that you enjoy!
Enjoy the liquid 

Thursday 18 April 2013

Cigarettes with 4000 plus chemicals - comment

If your going to regulate products like e-cigs and enforce health warnings, then should not the same apply to fast food, alcohol, caffeine and many other products. It is now known that fast food is a contributor to the current obesity problem, and the costs to the NHS and other organisations regarding alcohol abuse

I think this TPD is more about protecting the big pharmaceutical companies and the tobacco industry and associated revenues, and nothing to do with public health, it’s more a case of we need to look like we are doing something while actually doing nothing. If the EU was concerned with public health they would not have banned products like Swedish Snus across Europe.

Yes the ecig industry needs regulation but not by classing it as a medical product when by definition it is not a medical product, which has already been established by several court cases across Europe. If ecigs are medical products then cigarettes should also be medical products as they deliver the same nicotine as the electronic version, the only difference is with burning tobacco in cigarettes no one can control the other harmful chemicals that are produced in the smoke.

The current regulatory frame works would do fine for ecigs with some additional guide lines brought in to cover the nicotine liquids, all other aspects are fully covered by current trading standards, CHIP and various other regulations for consumer products.

Agreed no one yet knows what the long term effects of using electronic cigarettes are but surly common sense tells you that it’s got to be far safer than lit tobacco with the 4000+ chemicals some of which are still unknown but most medical professionals rate as 99% harmless.

Have you switched to vaping? Comment

Having switched to vaporising about 3 years ago, I tend to view it like this: The market has come up with a better way of getting a nicotine fix, using technology, to replace the ancient but incredibly dangerous and dirty burning a leaf approach

Right now there’s a huge cottage industry of ex-smokers trying to improve this technology, experimenting, exploring, trying to make the tech work in a way that means they never need to go back to tobacco. It feels like it’s ours, that we’re solving the problem ourselves.

I think about all the money and effort that’s been wasted trying to get smokers to stop through nagging, terrorising, financial penalties and social ostracism, and I’ve pretty convinced that politicians have nothing useful to add here.
I’d be very grateful if politicians could sit on their hands and not kill this industry with regulation. Would be nice if Lib Dems agreed.

Comment on vaping and eliquid

The EU should back off from legislation that brackets a nicotine-only delivery system with tobacco (which delivers nicotine with poisonous and carcinogenic elements).
Their proposals play into the hands of the tobacco industry and their lobbyists, who love to portray anti-smoking groups as fundamentalists out to stop anything passing the lips of the public that may not be totally beneficial.
As liberals, we should have no issue with people consuming an element when it harms no-one else but themselves – which is the precise function that e-cigarettes perform, and completely different to actual cigarettes (despite what the tobacco industry shills over at Liberal Vision would have you believe).
If there is a need to legislate them both, then it should be by means of colour coding so it is obvious from a distance whether a person is consuming an e-cigarette or the real thing. And that’s it.

Vaping and electronic cigarette emailed comments

I agree that e-cigarettes should not be sold to young people and in the UK at least, although this is not required by law, reputable vendors do not sell to young people or non-smokers.
All e-cigarette users want to know that products are safe, although current legislation provides for unsafe products to be removed from the market and Trading Standards have the power to prosecute.
There is no real, independent evidence that young people are attracted to electronic cigarettes unless they are already tobacco smokers. As NRT, which has an approximately 95% failure rate, is authorised to be given to children from age 12 and at least one school in the UK is giving NRT patches to any child aged 12 and over without informing parents or teachers, non-smoking children are using NRT patches in this school as a ‘badge of honour’.

Medicines regulation allows dangerous substances to be given to children if the risk/benefit equation is thought to make the risk worth the benefit and they do not have the warnings required by law for eliquids.

Flavours are very important in e-cigarettes, in part because nicotine is virtually odourless and tasteless. People who initially switch tend to prefer tobacco, later they explore the many flavours they can enjoy and avoid tobacco. Personally I would have no objection if some flavours were not permitted as I do not like them, but for other adults candy and bubblegum (for example) flavours are all that keep them from returning to smoking. These flavours were introduced at the request and demand from adult e-cigarette users, not to attract children.
Legislation that prevented smokers switching, such as reducing nicotine content to a percentage too low to satisfy smokers from switching no matter how many cigarettes they smoke would keep those people smoking and force others back to cigarettes.

The e-cigarette that looks like a cigarette is 1st generation technology. Many smokers are drawn to them both because they do resemble cigarettes so make the transition easier and because they are the most readily available. However now extremely efficient devices exist that bear no resemblance to cigarettes. Legislation could stifle innovation.

The threat of banning/medicalising e-cigarettes has caused panic buying and stockpiling the diluted nicotine base used to make eliquids. As nicotine is readily available although not necessarily of the pharmaceutical grade used in e-cigarette liquids this could lead to a self-fulfilling prophesy. Too much regulation would lead to people extracting their own nicotine, obtaining agricultural, buying on a new black market, if they are desperate not to return to smoking, or just returning to smoking.
I feel that this addition to the TPD is to protect the interests of pharmaceutical and tobacco companies as well as governments obtaining tax revenue from cigarette sales.

The only RAPEX report listed that related to eliquids was mislabelling. The rest were electrical faults and missing CE labels.
You are correct that requiring medical licensing for a consumer product that is not a medicine is the wrong way to go, but the more people learn of e-cigarettes the more smokers will switch. There is a possibility that if General Product Safety is robustly applied and an age limit is placed, that cigarettes could become a thing of the past.

Of course we do not want children to start vaping instead of smoking, but there is little or no evidence that this happens. Children prefer tobacco. But I, personally, would rather my child used e-cigarettes than real ones. We do know the very real dangers of smoking and all but some flavours have been used in medicines (some for inhalation) for decades.

Although the WHO states that nicotine is highly addictive we do not yet know if that is the case in humans. All studies on smoking and addiction are based on tobacco and smoking which contains many alkaloids. Many people who switch to e-cigarettes experience some of the withdrawal symptoms of stopping smoking, although they appear to be less severe.

I believe that the only truly independent and unbiased studies are being performed by Prof. Konstantinos Farsalinos . Several of his papers and studies have been published, another is due to be published shortly and he is conducting further research but, due to lack of funding by pharmaceutical, tobacco or governments (possibly because his reports are completely unbiased) he has had to appeal for donations from the general public.

EU smoking regulation led by big pharma

Everyone knows smoking is bad for you, it is a 'given'. I do not intend to embark here on my libertarian crusade that we should all be able to go to the devil in our own way. Chips, fizzy drinks, alcohol, tobacco, obesity, lack of exercise, drinking a glass of wine a day, not drinking a glass of wine a day - depending on the fad of the latest medical magazine or what any quangocrat, who worms their way onto breakfast television sofas, says.

 For those not in the know on electronic cigarettes, let me run some facts past you. Most of the health damage cigarettes cause is by the combustion in the smoking process. In short it is the smoke that does you harm, not the nicotine. I have spent some time researching this and can find no health scientist who takes a different view. The electronic cigarette takes smoke out of the procedure and replaces the experience of smoking and diminishes the nicotine craving in a similar way to the nicotine patch.

As smokers or ex-smokers will confirm it is the ritual of the procedure not just the nicotine, which encourages the addiction. There is also no scientific dispute as to the amount of nicotine imbibed by either system, it is the removal of smoke that has been the extraordinary breakthrough for those who wish to cut down or abandon the habit altogether. Of course there will be a few zealots reading this who have never smoked or the converts, ex-smokers who are the scourge of every dinner party. But most tolerant right-minded people would agree that this is a huge step forward for society in general.

In spite of the millions of pounds nanny state spends on anti-smoking it seems that one fifth of the population still smoke, which proves there is nothing so queer as folk. Incidentally, apropos of nothing my army experience showed officers in the 'better' regiments smoke and the corps generally does not. The other ranks all seem to smoke no matter how young but I digress.

The European Commission - how did we manage without it - has now published its proposal for revisions to the European Union Tobacco Products Directive. It appears to accept that electronic cigarettes fall outside its scope. But if the commission cannot regulate something it gets an institutional nosebleed so they have bunged it into the EU Medicines Directive 2001/83/EC. This means the small companies manufacturing these products will not be able to go through the hoops required of putting a new medicine on the market. Is this not all insane even by the standards of the EU?

We all thought so in my office. But one of my colleagues came up with the answer. There are more than 10,000 lobbyists in Brussels, all funded by big business to form alliances with bureaucrats and politicians in order to stitch up the punters. It seemed obvious to us initially that the tobacco barons had used their not inconsiderable muscle to keep people smoking the real thing but no, the end game benefits 'big pharma'. If it is medical they can clamp their iron grip on state health systems to corner the market and sell the product at five times the cost.

Obvious really, I cannot think how we did not spot it straight away. If you want to know how all this works you could do worse than read Against Leviathan, Government Power and a Free Society by Robert Higgs. Anyhow, we MEPs can still enjoy a good smoke in our members' bar. After all we are god's chosen people - not for us the restrictions on ordinary mortals. As Rudyard Kipling so aptly put it, a woman's only a woman but a good cigar is a smoke.
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If e Liquid contacts your skin then wash immediately with lots of water.

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Update: timescale

Yesterday it wasn't clear what the implementation route and timescale was likely to be. Now we know that it looks as if the Directive will need to be approved by the Council of Ministers and the Parliament, and that the new European Commissioner for Health and Consumer Affairs, Tonio Borg, hopes to achieve this before June 2014 when Parliament membership changes. This would mean the changes may come into effect in 2015.*

So it looks as if we may have two years to fight this - maybe to mid-2014. The final part of the fight will be to convince MEPs to vote it out, if the Directive makes it as far as the vote in Parliament. Once it is adopted by vote then that's it. Fighting this death sentence for thousands of people will be all about noise and money; consumers need to do their part and make the noise.

A historic moment

This will probably mark the first time in history that the public has had to go to the black market to buy healthier products as a result of government forcing them to choose the most dangerous products.

Note that NRTs are not a viable choice, they have a 95% to 98% failure rate, and are essentially useless. At least 95% of smokers who quit using NRTs are smoking again after 20 months, and after 3 years the failure rate approaches 99%.

What should consumers do?

Wake up and start to fight for your rights. The murderous, corrupt officials in government need to be stopped one way or another. Stop expecting governments and especially the EU to protect public health and consumer's rights; they work for the highest bidder. The EU already kills thousands of EU citizens every year by means of the Snus ban. Eventually that figure will rise to at least 10% of all smoking deaths (since all these numbers were reduced by 45% in Sweden).

If an e-cigarette ban stays in place (or a ban that makes e-cigarettes worthless in practice) then the figure will rise to approximately 60% of all smoking deaths being attributable to the EU (as it is expected that eventually 60% of smokers would have switched to Snus or e-cigarettes).

The EU is proven to ignore public health in favour of commercial interests. If you don't think this is right, then you need to get political. Or just help support your local smuggler. We think a political solution is preferable to supporting a black market.

How can E-Cigarette vendors survive?

They have several options:

1. Sell zero-nic liquid only.

2. Sell zero-nic and 4mg strength liquid. This is lower than even the lowest usual current strength of 6mg/ml and is useless for 99% of consumers.

3. Cease all e-liquid sales. This may not be a practical consideration as e-liquid has the highest mark-up of any product and in effect keeps other prices down.

4. Move offshore, or at least move the e-liquid sales side offshore: a. Move operations to a non-EU country and carry on as usual. Ensure that no UK office or website is involved in sales of real e-liquid. If the MHRA can prove that e-liquid sales originate from a UK office they will prosecute you, and you can expect this to be to the full extent of the law as this is what their paymasters will demand.
b. Separate the hardware and e-liquid sales in some way. Ensure that refills are sold via an offshore partner and are handled by an offshore website (outside the EU).

Supplies will still be able to be posted in at first, although some may be stopped and seized by customs. The MHRA will attempt to progressively tighten the customs controls for inbound parcels until they can be sure of stopping most traffic. They have already carried out a pilot project to demonstrate that they can indeed do this. You can be assured that postage of e-liquids will become progressively more difficult as very large 'benefits' will be paid to ensure this. The pharmaceutical industry has an unlimited amount of money to resolve problems

Tags: e-liquid   Smoke juice   Vaping   Electronic cigarettes   Vape juice    

What is the effect of such a ban on eliquid and vaping?

There will be several effects, among which are:

1. The single biggest threat to public health ever created by government will come into effect. Millions of e-cigarette users in Europe (there are over 500,000 just in the UK) will be driven back to smoking, or to buy their supplies on the black market.

2. The pharmaceutical and tobacco industries will be protected from a serious threat to their incomes.

3. Government employees in the EU and UK whose jobs would have been threatened by falling pharma drug sales and falling treatment levels for sick and dying smokers, and also those employed in the useless smoking cessation services [1], will now have security of employment.

4. Prices of e-cigarette supplies will rise as vendors will either have to close up shop or go offshore. They may also try to fight the ban at law, which means huge expenditure and thus higher prices.

5. The MHRA will have a license to visit vendors, threaten staff, and even impound stocks at vendor's premises on the pretext of enforcing the law (even where no nicotine-containing liquids are sold). This applies to both high street vendors and web-based vendors with a UK office or UK-hosted website. If premises are in EU countries or websites are hosted in EU countries, the MHRA will ask colleagues in those countries to carry out the enforcement action.

6. Trading Standards will be encouraged to take similar action.

7. Legitimate tax income will be removed from the UK.

8. The health impact of non-UK tested liquids also needs to be taken into account. Currently, we know that no e-liquid sold in the UK is contaminated (as it is fully regulated by Trading Standards, who test and analyse it). That safety system will now cease

Why ban e-liquid?

The reason is simple: it is the easiest ban to enforce that guarantees to make e-cigarettes useless. A ban on the hardware might well fall quickly on appeal at the EU High Court, but trying to overturn a ban on nicotine liquid may take a great deal of time and money, and may ultimately fail.

Such a ban is entirely corruption-based since it is directly opposed to the best interests of public health: it removes consumers' rights to safer tobacco-like consumption modes that are proven successful. The only alternatives will be pharma products that are expensive and proven unsuccessful (they have a 95% failure rate when averaged out). Therefore it can be seen that a ban on e-cigarettes (or a core component such as the refill liquid) must have been obtained by bribery. This comes as no surprise as we have recently seen the financial motives that EU health committee members are driven by.

Tags: e-liquid   Smoke juice   Vaping   Electronic cigarettes   Vape juice    

Ban on e liquid in the EU and UK?

It is looking increasingly likely that e-liquid sales will be banned in the forthcoming EU Tobacco Directive rewrite.

A figure of 4mg/ml nicotine strength has been quoted as the upper limit for EU sales, and because EU law is UK law, this means it will be enforced in the UK. There are two reasons for this:

1. EU law is enforced more strictly in the UK than anywhere else. In many countries, they take a laissez-faire attitude to EU regulations and basically ignore them. This applies the further south you go, as you may well know if you travel widely. However the UK takes the opposite view and regards EU law as written in stone. The same might occasionally be said about Germany, but many would say the UK enforces EU law more strictly than any other country.

2. The MHRA is the pharmaceutical industry's legal arm within government, and will enforce this regulation with an iron fist.

How to care for your e liquid e-cigarette

 How to care for your e liquid e-cigarette

After using your Electronic health cigarette for awhile you may notice that the amount of vapor that it produces will become less, the reason for this is after some time the Atomizer gets clogged up with residue from the liquid. But there are a couple of things that you can do to fix or prevent this from happening.

Prevent liquid from building up inside the atomizer by leaving it upside down on a paper towel every night before you go to bed, you should see liquid on the paper towel when you wake up in the morning.

Rinse your atomizer under warm running water while holding it with a tweezers for a couple of minutes and leave it to dry overnight on a paper towel.
Don't use too much liquid on the atomizer, more liquid will not produce more smoke it will just damage your electronic health cigarette.

(Note: There may be certain electronic cigarette stores out there that may say that this will break your atomizer, these people have a very poor understanding on how exactly an atomizer really works and it would be ill-advised to listen to any advice they might have, we have tested this method countless times with various types of liquid and it works great. It has nothing to do with the type of liquid being used)"Just be sure to let it dry over night"

Remember that after you rinsed your atomizer it may take up to 40 drags before it will function properly again, this is because the wick has to absorb the liquid again.

Always keep the part that connects to the battery dry because if any liquid gets into the battery it will cause the pressure switch to malfunction and will void your 3 month warranty on your battery. So always clean both ends of the Battery screw connector regularly.

Beware of cheap e-liquid, usually found in high steet shops and markets. For best results please visit www.bestcigliquid.co.uk

 Tags: e-liquid   Smoke juice   Vaping   Electronic cigarettes   Vape juice   

Monday 15 April 2013

Cheapest e liquid, smoke juice and vaping liquid on the Internet!

Amazing tobacco flavoured e liquid and vaping e cig juice available at www.bestcigliquid.co.uk

bestcigliquid has the cheapest e liquid and vaping juice anywhere on the internet. We use only the best ingredients and our standard is second to non. We specialise in tobacco e liquid available in various e liquid strengths, sizes and flavours. If you need tobacco flavoured eliquid then please visit www.bestcigliquid.co.uk.

Common tobacco flavours such as Golden Virginia, Lambert and butler, benson and hedges, Marlboro e liquid to name a few plus a large selection on new and popular tobacco e liquids that have vapers seeming at the mouth.

Got friends and familly that vape too? No problem! We have a selection of very popular tobacco eliquid and ejuice at even cheaper prices when you buy more than one. In fact, the more you purchase the more you save so why go anywhere else? Our reviews speak for themselves.

Quality E-liquid and E-juice for vaping electronic cigarettes



TV E-Liquid was originally formed by ex-tobacco smokers who had turned to electronic cigarettes as a healthier alternative. Shortly after making the switch we soon discovered that sourcing good quality E-Liquid was a bit of a hit and miss affair, given that there are so many E-Liquid suppliers out there.

Our mission and goal was clearly apparent, we wanted to offer a genuine, competitive and most importantly a better quality service and product than most others can even try to offer.

When electronic cigarettes came along we thought they were the best thing since sliced bread (or real cigarettes as the case may be). Our enthusiasm for the modern day electronic cigarette gave us the drive and determination to produce premium quality tobacco E-Liquid products that our customers would love and trust in.

Why buy from TV E-Liquid UK?

Good question! Here are some of the reasons...

Our E-Liquid is of the highest quality and standard: 

We source only the best ingredients to go in to all of our E-Liquid products. We mix and bottle our E-Liquid in the UK under the strictest conditions which ensures you get exactly the same flavour, strength and quality in every bottle. Many suppliers just order their E-liquid from foreign suppliers, slap their logo on it and push it as their own, this can result in varying quality and flavour levels, we don't do this! All our products are tested and quality controlled before we offer them for sale.
Each of our flavours has a unique, individual recipe to ensure the fullest flavour, the best vapour production, a great throat hit and an overall satisfying experience.

We are an E-Liquid tobacco specialist:


TV E-Liquid only produces and deals in quality tobacco flavoured E-Liquid products, we know E-Liquid and we know what it takes to produce quality. Many other outlets offer many different tobacco e-liquid products from unknown suppliers. This you must be careful as you do not know what is in it.

Our prices are competitive:

One of the many reasons people turn to electronic cigarettes is because of the cost saving advantages. We understand and support this fact and by doing so offer what we see as fair prices across the board.  We also strive to keep our costs down without compromising quality which in-turn means we don't have regular price hikes, like some other E-Liquid retailers.

For more information please visit tobacco-vape.co.uk

Tags: e-liquid   Smoke juice   Vaping   Electronic cigarettes   Vape juice   

E liquid and smoke juice for electronic cigarette vaping

Hello all... Just to let you know of a new website launched a few weeks ago concentrating on tobacco flavoured e-liquids in nice 30 ml bottles to 5 ml bottles and strengths from 34 mg to 5 mg. We can provide a 36 mg on special request.

A very handy website who are new to eliquid and vaping. We concentrate on strong tobacco eliquid for those who want their eliquid strong and nice.


Here is a list and link to some of our tobacco flavours:

Goldern Virginia e-liquid : Golden Virginia eliquid

Benson and Hedges e-liquid: Benson and Hedges eliquid

Lambert and buttler e-liquid: Lambert and Butler eliquid

Winston e-liquid: Winston eliquid

Menthol e-liquid: Menthol eliquid

Bulk buy and discount e-liquid: Wholesale and bulk buy eliquid

For e liquid information please visit our vaping e juice forum at  eliquid forum

Tags: Golden Virginia  Lambert and Butler  Winston  Menthol  e-liquid  Vaping