I've never been actually shown the 'proper' way to degas with VacuVin. Obviously there are 9 ways to skin a cat. And I've looked up videos but none are too detailed and each person has slightly different ways. Basically my new question has morphed to "when vacuum degassing(with any tool that gives a sealed vacuum) is it proper procedure to leave wine sit under vacuum for an extended time period after the remaining fizz has gone?"
the answer is "it depends". with a vacuvin, I'd sit there and baby sit it since you have no way of observing the vacuum stability so the only way you know degassing is occurring is by seeing bubbles.
If you have a proper vacuum pump with a gauge and valve to read your vacuum, I'd pump down to your target vacuum, close the valve, shut the pump off, and walk away.
Here's why:
if you apply vacuum above the wine it allows the CO2 to come out of solution. if you gradually leak vacuum over time back to atmospheric, the CO2 will go back in to solution; but without a gauge you'll never know if the bubbles are gone because the wine is fully degassed or if the CO2 went back in to solution due to vacuum loss.
With a gauge, you pull vacuum, note the vacuum you pulled, and walk away. check on it in an hour and if you're holding good vacuum that means you have a good seal, so you can walk away and check on it in a couple hours. As CO2 comes out of solution, your vacuum will decrease so you should expect to see a gradual loss in vacuum. When your vacuum stabilizes, that means no more CO2 is coming out, so you're fully degassed.
I'll qualify this with I've never vacuum degassed wine, so I have no idea how long it will take for the vacuum to decrease and stabilize - but this is what the physics of the situation say will happen with a dose of knowing how to work on vacuum based systems (AC and refrigeration)