Have been thinking much about the gh, and think it simply is a sort of nice vaporizer jammed into a form factor that makes it a bit less nice.
If GHL guys had started out with the concept of designing a fantastic portable vape, they likely would have done better. Rather they started out with the concept of designing a fantastic portable PEN vape. And they succeeded ... sort of. They made a fantastic portable one-hitter.
The thing is the form factor of a pen vape offers certain limitations that are hard to get past. For instance the smaller battery. The heat issues. Loading and unloading.
These are issues related precisely to the pen form factor. Though I really think they could have figured out an easier way to load and unload, so it's not as much a limitation as just a design issue. Future versions could address this no doubt.
Another issue, for instance as compare to the Elevape which has no on/off switch as it's activated by sucking on it, they could have designed the gh so that there is no need for the awkward clicker and the heavy thumbed clicking that must be done. Two clicks to get it back on after an auto-shutoff? Come on, this is so 1950s, and we're a bit beyond that now.
After all, they already have a flow sensor that keeps the gh turned on. That same sensor could have been used to TURN IT ON as well, with suction. Just like the Elevape. It already auto-shutsoff. So what's the point of a heavy and apparently somewhat problematic, as well as BIG compared to the overall vape, hard to press on/off switch? Design flaw is what it seems like at this point. That clicker ... is a bit of a pain, and some with arthritis might be unable to use it easily or at all.
The clicker, the on/off switch, goes right to the heart of the issue, and that is they were trying to make it look and act like a pen, but this gets in the way of of the gh acting like a great and easy to use vaporizer.
That's the trade off, do you want a pen vape, or do you want an excellent vaporizer? In this case, making it a pen vaporizer has definitely reduced it's utility as a pure vaporizer for many situations, though it does work nicely as a one-hitter.
Also, the silicon tip is almost always needed, as such it seems more suited as an integrated piece rather than a slip on piece, though if integrated into the tip it would still need to be removable for cleaning. The thing about slip on, is it slips off. There are going to be a lot of lost silicon tips, well, if the gh gets used a lot. I don't use mine much now after a couple weeks, but have nearly lost the tip a couple times because it silently slips off at times and NOT when I'm expecting or watching.
Putting a PEN form factor as the design driver, as the main design driver of the overall gh vape, has resulted in limiting it's overall utility quite a bit. If they first designed a fantastic vape and with stealth as a primary driver, they very likely would have come out ahead of where they did, and probably wouldn't have arrived at a pen form factor due to these clear limitations.
So, while I write this, taking hits off a milaana, though the gh is right here too.