Man that thing is looking POTENT
I can attest to that after a week of testing...
I've also gotten quite good at getting the most out of Lil' Bud. Here are some honest observations on how to get the most out of Lil' Bud.
Herb prep helps a lot. It allows you to immediately access the good stuff without having to evaporate all the moisture (steam in your lungs for no reason) first. I make it simple, I have a little lamp with a 6 x 6 mesh on top of it. The light bulb is about 4 inches below the herb. I leave it there for 15 to 30 minutes. I dump it in a mini glass bowl and crush it up by hand. Dry, it should break right up easily. Get it relatively fine, super clean, it shouldn't be total dust, but fluffy.
Set basket screen into stem with concave side towards tip. The stir tool will be also serve as a gauge (and support) that will help you to set the depth of the screen in the short wooden stems when first installing, or any time you need to adjust. Some people prefer very close to the tip, I prefer the edge of the basket to be about a 1/16 to an 1/8 or so from the tip. This gives you the best combination of close enough to keep things vaporizing clean (not getting gummy), and enough room to fit about .08 to .1 typically. I feel for most weed, any load less then .8 or so sacrifices a bit on taste and efficiency, although still works well for a quicker session. This can vary from bud to bud, even with the same batch. You want to tamp into Lil' hockey puck for Lil' Bud. Video coming soon.
Learning to get the prep/screen distance/tamp right, optimizes and simplifies the actual session. Now there are 2 variables, draw and switch. We are assuming a clean screen and proper prep/screen/tamp. Press the button and inhale. You can feel and even hear the rush of hot air exchange. If all is right, it's a pretty wide open air path, so pay attention to draw speed as you hold down the button. Instant feed back should tell you whether to speed up or slow down to create the most vapor, but not come close to charring. You must realize that the breath pulling the heat is what is making the load hot, not the pressing of the button. The trigger turns the coil immediately on, but your breath pulls that coil heat immediately into the load. If you pull to fast, or hard, you can char, even if you let go of the trigger. This will become second nature after a few sessions. And have no fear, a drop of charring in the load is no big deal. The bad boy can take it.
You'll also want to stir at least once. There have been many loads I haven't stirred, but milked every drop as is, but stirring makes it easier to quickly access what's left or to revive a bowl. I advise against leaving a stem uncleaned. Gets all cakey, cleans easier right away with the pick tool.