- Flavor being the "best" doesn't mean much. In addition to the 4 in the review, I also wore out an AromaZap, and have made and used homemade vapes. I'm no expert, but vaporizing isn't exactly rocket surgery either. None of the vapes I've had had any bad flavor, maybe just a smell if that. The Supreme won on intensity more than purity, largely because that's easier to determine, but also because the differences in "purity" between vapes were much smaller.
- The burn marks are from being sloppy of course, and if I wasn't routinely burning it in ways specifically forbidden by the manual (330F max, don't ever point at wood!), I'm sure there'd be nothing.
- Dry runs up to 350F had no flavor except heat and maybe a slight hint of depleted herbs. Or maybe I was imagining that and it was just hot air. Maybe the wood has a smell, but if it does, it's constant, not just when heated.
- Thermometer reading would need to be taken from the tube. IR would be fine, as would some different styles I'm sure.
- The SV is much better at vaporizing herb than the VG, but the VG can be dropped in a pocket. The Supreme absolutely slays the Vapor Genie in size of hit, ease and consistency, and also taste because I accidentally combust regularly with VG, though it may be fine if I never did. Maybe I'm tasting old combusted stank and that's why the clean Supreme seems so much better. VG rules for pocketing, so it's staying. I'm not offended by the VG, but the SV seems cleaner tasting to me.
- Thinking of the Supreme as portable is fine, as long as you realize that using it on-the-go isn't really its thing. You can go somewhere and use it like an electric powered model, but you really should have some room to operate and a little cool off time after.