I am looking to get one to get away from my pen vape. Priority is health, so a clean “bake” with no plastics involved would be nice.

    • PutangInaMo@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I bought this recently (well the solo 2) and it hits hard! My only other is the POTV one, which has done be well too.

  • Delta 3D Studios@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I work in the industry and have owned/handled countless vaporizers (lost count around four dozen). Unlike oil vapes, dry herbal vaporizers perform very differently.

    Dry herbal vapes come in many shapes and sizes - from stealthy portables to massive desktop units. Some are stealthy, some taste better, some cloud chase faster, some have better temperature regulation, etc.

    The thing to understand is that for most ents who use dry vaporizers, we have multiple in our collection because there is no “perfect” device for every scenario. PLUS it’s best to switch up devices a few times a year to avoid building up a “tolerance” to the device (it’s mostly psychological due to the habitual use of the device - load sizes, temps used, draw patterns used, etc).

    My advice would be to start with a good entry level budget-friendly device. Get your “bearings” on how dry vaporizers perform so you can then make a more educated decision when buying a second device (maybe you want one with a larger oven, or faster extraction, etc) - it’s a lot easier searching for comparison reviews where people say X device is different from Y device in such ways.

    Like feel free to ask me about a bunch of different devices, I’ll be happy to give you the pros and cons to that device (assuming I’ve handled it).

    For a novice user, I have three suggestions:

    • Xmax V3 Pro - great entry level device, removable 18650 battery (easy to swap out batteries and keep vaping), two cooking modes “session” (my favorite for the device) and “on demand” (less efficient, but pushes heater to heat up faster for a quicker “puff”)

    • POTV One Vaporizer (HealthyRips Fury Edge device with a few revisions for the specific vendor). I’d say it cooks a bit more efficiently overall than the Xmax v3 pro, but non removable battery is bad thing to some people

    • Dynavap Vapcap-B - a great budget friendly device that’s awesome when you learn how to use it. It’s an analog device with a cult-like following these days for good reason - it performs unlike most other devices on the market lol. They’re a fun device for off-the-grid use because it can be heated with so many different methods (electric induction coil, cigar torch, campfire coals, tea candle, even a magnifier and sunlight!). I think a Vapcap belongs in everyone’s collection (I even have a first-gen Omnivap from Dynavap which is made out of Titanium making it more indestructible lol)

  • bleph@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    YoCan Vane is a great budget option (~$50) sold at lots of head shops.

    Just let it cool off in between 3 min cycles, and keep the charger close.

  • zuluwalker@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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    1 year ago

    DynaVap and Mighty+. Devices set on the opposite ends of the spectrum: consumption, construction, cost.

    Mighty+ is (thermo)plastic but it’s a medically-approved device, so no off-gassing and idiot-proof, expensive to buy with high material consumption. DynaVap is a miser with material, cheap to own and hard to master. Best used with an IH (I prefer the Ispire Wand).

    They both get me to where I need to be, at different speeds and complexities.