Despite any gripes I have about my VC, the fact is that I need a non electronic vape and also a solid microdosing vape so the VC was right up my alley. I will proudly have in my rotation or as a backup, forever. The form factor is totally my style. The functionality/convenience/user friendliness are the best things about it.
Now that I have that out of the way, onto the gripes:
-Tight draw resistance when plugging the carb hole to get full extraction.
-The cap gets discolored from heat application.
-Having to use a lighter is not how I like to session. That's not a vapcap issue though, more of a butane vape issue.
-Taste degrades fairly quickly; again, that's not really the VC's fault, it's just the nature of small chambers.
That's really it. Do I think it's perfect, no, but no vape is. Do I think it's genius engineering, hell yes.
Do I think it's comical to see people spending a grand on a collection of 10 different vapcaps, absolutely. Then again, you've got to tip your hat to George for creating the buzz that gets people to do crazy shit like buy 10 Vapcaps just for themselves. He's a very smart guy from a business standpoint. I wish I could work for Dynavap.
I also think it's strange that people have learning curve issues with the VC, to me it's so incredibly user friendly that I would have to try really hard to screw something up. It doesn't even seem possible to combust with it unless you're deliberately trying to. Maybe that's b/c I have the Ti tip which cools faster? IDK. As long as you grind fine and pack somewhat tight and follow the very basic instructions, the VC is foolproof. Meanwhile no one seems to have problems operating the Sticky Brick but I can't learn how to use that thing to save my life.
I just feel like this vape (and other conduction vapes) aren't the healthiest due to the pyrolysis and potentially releasing nasty chemicals. I prefer a "clean" vapour that can FULLY extract, but leave a lighter ABV as I don't want the herb fully caramelized.
That's why I got the Ti model. Titanium is the safest bet around which is why titanium cookware is very expensive and considered flagship cookware.. I'm not sure what the cap is made of though, anyone know? And usually when I dump my load it is fully extracted but it's cardboard brown, not coffee brown. Of course I could take it to the brink of combustion and turn it midnight brown but I'm not into that