not that i condone driving while vaporizing, as it's a distraction, but regardless, imagine someone drives by you and you notice they have what appears to be (at a glance) an ordinary inhaler. there are definitely blue inhalers, just like there are yellow and other colors. to me, the blue puffit looks almost identical to the blue medical inhalers. personally, i've not been all that impressed with any of the vape pens i've used, but i will admit, they do pretty much rival the puffit in regards to stealth.
As I said, it may pass a casual inspection. Probably will even. And the further the observer and more fleeting the glance the better. However, in actual use it's not good cover IMO. Nobody uses an inhaler like folks use the Puffit. They don't look at it, play with it or wait. Take it out, pull the cap,
shake it up (which 'never' happens with Puffit) and hit it right then. 10 seconds max. Puffit users stare into the hole waiting to the light then hit it for ten seconds or so straight, not two. It's gonna look odd to even the casual looker I think. In the same conditions I think palming the MFLB is much better cover for instance.
Yes, blue has advantages over black, but it's the way you use it not the color that's going to attract attention I think? Too bad your vape pen experience hasn't been more impressive to you, I assume that means you haven't tried Omicron or Revolution? While I agree they are stealthy in their own right, I was saying that open use blends in with the e-cig 'smokers'. I know guys here in California (where we treat smokers like fourth class citizens.....won't even let them ride at the back of the bus.....who join the guys at the bar out in the parking lot and toke up while guys a few feet away puff madly.
I just think counting on looking like a 'harmless inhaler' is dangerous false confidence. It will work most times, but has serious flaws in regular practice. Sooner or later it will lead to grief?
OF