Vapour2 PRO Series 7 for concentrates?

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Piruz

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Feb 12, 2021
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Just had a look at the Vapour2 PRO Series 7 and I really like how simple it is to use and how quickly it heats up. One problem though: it doesn't seem to have (or accept) inserts for concentrates (in my case Dokha tobacco, smoked in very small amounts because you do not want to be vaporizing a large bowl of that stuff). Any ideas?

Also, when vaporizing dry herbs is it okay to leave the herb in the chamber for like 3 hours and then come back and vape it later on or does it have to be finished in one sitting otherwise it dries out and loses its flavor/nicotine?
 

CAAB

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Feb 9, 2019
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I read this from V2 vaping website about the product:

The product is now end of line and replacement cartridges are no longer available so the kit price has been heavily discounted to reflect this.​

So my question would be if you need cartridges to do the herbs, because it sounds like they will be hard to find.

As for letting the tobacco sit in the chamber after heating it. I am not sure about that, but I would think it's probably not a good idea. After heating it up, it probably will be more likely to dry out or be converted into undesirable compounds. Although you'll probably have to test it out yourself and see if there is flavor loss after letting it sit a few hours. If it were me, I would just put in what I was going to use in any given time, making sure that my device would be ok to hold just the amount I need.
 

CAAB

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Feb 9, 2019
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It was a long time since I looked into this, but I was thinking of doing the same thing you did. When I looked at dry herb vaporizer devices there was one I found, I can't remember it. I liked it because it had a glass chamber for dry herbs that was easy to take out and clean. No cartridges or anything like that. It also had temperature control you could dial in by a few degree increments, so you could fine tune your vape. It accepted an 18650 battery I think, so I didn't have to worry about the device becoming useless when the internal battery died.

The problem with removable 18650 batteries though is that you need to research battery safety and how to get the correct battery for the amps your device is pulling and how to prevent the purchase of fake batteries. Vape batteries are powerful and need to be handled and inspected appropriately. Some people don't want to be bothered and just have an internal battery device.

Anyway, I wish I could remember what it was. It wasn't cheap I remember.
 
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