As a little englander, I'm just like 🤯
Musk, RFK and now Oz. And probably more crazy picks that I know very little about.
This is going to be one far out Cabinet. It's like something The Onion would publish. And it would be pretty funny if it wasn't so fucking frightening.
I love it. It's only a step behind the TM2 and Firewood9 for me.
But it is a pain in the arse to clean, I'll give you that. The bits around the loading bowl are so fiddley. There are definite improvements to be made in this area. I am never confident I will be able to get them back in. Maybe...
I think that works really well for nicotine vapes, but IMO the delay between initial draw and production of happy clouds is too long for this to be a useful feature for dry herb vapes. Not tried the Mambo though, so not talking from experience.
This is the thread I needed. Been trying to work out what VAS stood for since I joined.
Though tbh, I intuitively knew.... just we call it shinyitis round our way. 🪙
Thanks @.brew, that makes sense 🧠
You've got 10 years on me, but in my 30 of toking, I've never really used grinders (just rip with fingers and shove in a rizla). But now I've switched to vapourisers, obv it's become an essential.
Possibly repeating myself from another thread or forum but...
When I first started vaping (7 years ago-ish) I found it less satisfying than a joint. That first year I rolled up a fat bifta for christmas day as a "treat".
Looked forward to it for ages... but when the day arrived and I sparked...
> 'newest version 2024.09'.
They seem to say it about all their vaporisers. When you posted that line I knew immediately which store you were talking about 🤣
I'm not saying it aint true though!
I would add to that list:
- stronger, more robust main hinge, and battery cover
- possibly a "soft close" on that main door
- better connection between device and mouthpiece (so it doesn't come off in your bag/pocket)
- easier to clean when not using capsules
Ha.
I don't think you'll regret it.
Some bits could be more robust, that's all. But it's not like they're especially fragile in the first place. They just won't take being used as a football.
Regardless there's a 10yr (I think?) warranty.
I think that a lot of grinders have metal on metal, or plastic on plastic friction. Is this problem limited to the flowermill? If so I'm interested in why... is it the metal they used or the heavy lid causing more friction than other grinders.. ?
If I were some of the people in this thread...