Agreed. Others have posted great looking cigar cases that seem to work too.Thank you for the video & glad you got a nice working unit. This thing really can rip for such a small device. I am thinking maybe 1 of the best wood workers i know @Ed's TnT may be able to come up with some nice wood carrying cases for them.
Thank you for the video & glad you got a nice working unit. This thing really can rip for such a small device. I am thinking maybe 1 of the best wood workers i know @Ed's TnT may be able to come up with some nice wood carrying cases for them.
Cheers matey that was brilliant.I've put together another video.
A few more comments, more clouds.
The real cloud chasers will want to pay attention to the part starting around 4:40.
Highlight: Finish a whole load in two hits.
EDIT: If I can pester you with one more question; I'm interested to hear how the airflow through a piece is with the GH, I noticed it seemed to be quite restrictive whilst filling the chamber, and there seemed to be a huge difference in perc function between GH on and GH off for clearing?
How much harder is the draw compared to an open bong hole?
Np Ed , well i don't know many woodworkers , i have ordered some items online made of wood & have got some things from you and i have to say yours has been way better in quality , material used and looks alone so to me i'd have to say your work is up there with the best man. As for acquiring a grasshopper to make something , there are not many out there yet in the wild so it may be hard. There are a few members that have had some problems so maybe someone see's this and can help out by at least sending a defective unit your way that's not in use. If anyone can help please message Ed , i am more than sure he would make you very happy for helping out.Good morning, thanks for the kind words my friend, I wouldn't say I am anywhere the best at anything, feel I just get lucky is all! One thing is certain I would damn sure give it a go, just need to have a unit in my hands, anyone wanna send one my way? Thanks for thinking of me bro, means alot!
I've been thinking a bit about the tech behind the Grasshopper's heater. The hopperheater? Der Hoppenheater von Grazenhoppen...
Given how much engineering has gone into the pen form, including the wire-less communication and the complicated high-amperage switch and dial, it seems like it would take considerably less effort to bring this heater tech to a simpler form-factor than it did to bring the Grasshopper to (slow) production. I'm thinking something shaped like one of those "box mod" e-cigs. Bigger battery, more insulation, longer vapor path… A zenbox?
There's so much going on with the design of the Grasshopper; the size, shape, and material all lend serious design challenges. It seems to me that they've done a hell of a job dealing with those limitations, and I'm curious what they'd come up with if they were free of them.
Here's to hoping Hopper Labs pulls through the full launch of the Grasshopper. I'm really enjoying mine and can't wait for more folks to have one. It's great seeing more positive reports, and those videos!
Someone else was thinking near-instant convection is easier to achieve outside of the pen format.Given how much engineering has gone into the pen form, including the wire-less communication and the complicated high-amperage switch and dial, it seems like it would take considerably less effort to bring this heater tech to a simpler form-factor than it did to bring the Grasshopper to (slow) production. I'm thinking something shaped like one of those "box mod" e-cigs. Bigger battery, more insulation, longer vapor path… A zenbox?
There's so much going on with the design of the Grasshopper; the size, shape, and material all lend serious design challenges. It seems to me that they've done a hell of a job dealing with those limitations, and I'm curious what they'd come up with if they were free of them.
I really want to get my hands on one of those. With that said, IMO Hopper Labs has succeeded well enough in dealing with the Grasshopper's form-factor limitations to let its form-factor strengths shine. I enjoy the superb pocket-ability and the hand-feel while in use. As a vape fanatic I might consider offering to trade my Grasshopper for someone's Zion or one of its little siblings, if only just to try it, except I would miss my Grasshopper…Someone else was thinking near-instant convection is easier to achieve outside the pen format.
Why not Zoidberg?I really want to get my hands on one of those. With that said, IMO Hopper Labs has succeeded well enough in dealing with the Grasshopper's form-factor limitations to let its form-factor strengths shine. I enjoy the superb pocket-ability and the hand-feel while in use. As a vape fanatic I might consider offering to trade my Grasshopper for someone's Zion or one of its little siblings, if only just to try it, except I would miss my Grasshopper…
I'd like both!
My thoughts exactly, I'd love to see what their next vaporizer (the Locust??) will look like. Maybe a standard 18650 battery this time around?
I've had my SS GH for about a week now, and have a few comments, as well as a few questions. Comments first:
As others have said, it really does appear to be well-engineered. Looks great, feels great in the hand, and everything fits together solidly and smoothly like a well built watch.
I was a little bit confused at first by on/off switching. Click it and it turns on and lights up, and then after a short while the lights go out and it cools off. So it must be off, right? Wrong. You still have to click it again to turn it off. Then click it again to turn it back on again. None of this is explained in the instructions though, so I had to write to Trevor to get clarification. I think the instruction booklet should get a bit of a rewrite to explain some of the important details before the next time they have some printed up.
And to reiterate what others have said, this thing does get hot. I couldn't use it for more than one hit without the silicone mouthpiece.
A few questions for current GH users:
I've noticed that mine gets VERY hot, but only very briefly, around the temperature dial right after turning it on. Almost too hot to touch with my hand. It quickly cools off, and by the time the front/mouthpiece gets hot, the backend has already cooled off. (I'm aware that some others have had backend heat up issues, but I got the impression these were units that then went bad and didn't work at all. Mine seems to be functioning ok, it just gets hot.) When I wrote to Trevor, I asked him about this, and he said this was normal. But based on other comments I've read here, some folks don't seem to be having the same "normal" experience I am. So - is anyone else having the same heat issue with the backend on an otherwise working unit?
I've also noticed that when charging, sometimes the red LEDs continue to blink slowly (indicating that it's charging) no matter how long I leave it on the charger. The booklet indicates that once fully charged, the LEDs will blink blue slowly. With mine, sometimes this eventually happens, but most of the time it doesn't, no matter how long I charge it. Anyone else have with experience, or know anything about it?
Though it doesn't seem logical to me based on mounting user reports, I am compelled to ask, could "normal" with regard to heat and charge characteristics cover such a wide range of temperature and charge times? Some users report hot front and/or back ends and odd-spec charge times and indicators, while others report cool temps at both ends and per spec charging. Shouldn't cookie-cutter electronic parts and assembly all yield nearly identical performance characteristics within fractional tolerances? I don't recall any other electronic vape ever exhibiting such broad range of expected "normal" function, user technique notwithstanding. It would be interesting to learn that every Grasshopper is endowed with artificial intelligence empowering each with autonomous choice of control over it's own temperatures and charge signatures.I've had my SS GH for about a week now, and have a few comments, as well as a few questions. Comments first:
As others have said, it really does appear to be well-engineered. Looks great, feels great in the hand, and everything fits together solidly and smoothly like a well built watch.
I was a little bit confused at first by on/off switching. Click it and it turns on and lights up, and then after a short while the lights go out and it cools off. So it must be off, right? Wrong. You still have to click it again to turn it off. Then click it again to turn it back on again. None of this is explained in the instructions though, so I had to write to Trevor to get clarification. I think the instruction booklet should get a bit of a rewrite to explain some of the important details before the next time they have some printed up.
And to reiterate what others have said, this thing does get hot. I couldn't use it for more than one hit without the silicone mouthpiece.
A few questions for current GH users:
I've noticed that mine gets VERY hot, but only very briefly, around the temperature dial right after turning it on. Almost too hot to touch with my hand. It quickly cools off, and by the time the front/mouthpiece gets hot, the backend has already cooled off. (I'm aware that some others have had backend heat up issues, but I got the impression these were units that then went bad and didn't work at all. Mine seems to be functioning ok, it just gets hot.) When I wrote to Trevor, I asked him about this, and he said this was normal. But based on other comments I've read here, some folks don't seem to be having the same "normal" experience I am. So - is anyone else having the same heat issue with the backend on an otherwise working unit?
I've also noticed that when charging, sometimes the red LEDs continue to blink slowly (indicating that it's charging) no matter how long I leave it on the charger. The booklet indicates that once fully charged, the LEDs will blink blue slowly. With mine, sometimes this eventually happens, but most of the time it doesn't, no matter how long I charge it. Anyone else have with experience, or know anything about it?
I've had my SS GH for about a week now, and have a few comments, as well as a few questions. Comments first:
As others have said, it really does appear to be well-engineered. Looks great, feels great in the hand, and everything fits together solidly and smoothly like a well built watch.
I was a little bit confused at first by on/off switching. Click it and it turns on and lights up, and then after a short while the lights go out and it cools off. So it must be off, right? Wrong. You still have to click it again to turn it off. Then click it again to turn it back on again. None of this is explained in the instructions though, so I had to write to Trevor to get clarification. I think the instruction booklet should get a bit of a rewrite to explain some of the important details before the next time they have some printed up.
And to reiterate what others have said, this thing does get hot. I couldn't use it for more than one hit without the silicone mouthpiece.
A few questions for current GH users:
I've noticed that mine gets VERY hot, but only very briefly, around the temperature dial right after turning it on. Almost too hot to touch with my hand. It quickly cools off, and by the time the front/mouthpiece gets hot, the backend has already cooled off. (I'm aware that some others have had backend heat up issues, but I got the impression these were units that then went bad and didn't work at all. Mine seems to be functioning ok, it just gets hot.) When I wrote to Trevor, I asked him about this, and he said this was normal. But based on other comments I've read here, some folks don't seem to be having the same "normal" experience I am. So - is anyone else having the same heat issue with the backend on an otherwise working unit?
I've also noticed that when charging, sometimes the red LEDs continue to blink slowly (indicating that it's charging) no matter how long I leave it on the charger. The booklet indicates that once fully charged, the LEDs will blink blue slowly. With mine, sometimes this eventually happens, but most of the time it doesn't, no matter how long I charge it. Anyone else have with experience, or know anything about it?
I think your grasshopper has backend issues, even if Trevor says no. There is no reason for the back to get hot. The only thing that would cause this is significant electrical resistance. .
Please email Trevor and ask him to explain why we should accept this as "normal" in both layman AND engineering terms.Yeah, that's what I was thinking too. It's getting hot - very hot - in an area where there isn't a heating element. That worries me.
@slcbdco you have the pax 2 and the GH. I know they're different but I've seen some say that you need to let the herb dry a little for the pax 2 to hit better. What about the GH, can you put moist in or is it better to let it dry some first?
I was a little bit confused at first by on/off switching. Click it and it turns on and lights up, and then after a short while the lights go out and it cools off. So it must be off, right? Wrong. You still have to click it again to turn it off. Then click it again to turn it back on again. None of this is explained in the instructions though, so I had to write to Trevor to get clarification. I think the instruction booklet should get a bit of a rewrite to explain some of the important details before the next time they have some printed up.
Colorado herb is VERY dry which is what I usually have. When I was in Oregon I had very wet and sticky bud and I thought the flavor was much better. Also being here in VT my bud has regained some moisture and it tastes better than it would after this much jar conditioning time in CO so I'd say the wetter the better.