
Vape Wattage Guide: What It Means and What to Set Yours At
Vape wattage is how much power your kit sends to the coil. Turn it up and the coil gets hotter, vapour gets thicker, flavour gets stronger. Turn it down and everything cools off, the draw gets lighter, and your battery lasts longer. We get asked about wattage on live chat probably more than any other single topic. Most of the time the answer is simple: stick to what's printed on your coil and adjust from there. But there's a bit more to it if you want to get the best out of your setup, so here's the full picture. Vaping Wattage Chart Start at the low end of the range for your coil and work up in 2-3W steps. When the flavour and warmth feel right, stop there. Coil resistance Wattage range Vaping style Best e-liquid type 1.2 ohm 8-14W MTL (tight draw) Nic salts 10-20mg 1.0 ohm 10-16W MTL Nic salts or 50/50 freebase 0.8 ohm 12-20W MTL / loose MTL Nic salts or 50/50 freebase 0.6 ohm 15-25W RDL (restricted lung) 50/50 or 60/40 VG/PG 0.4 ohm 20-35W RDL / DTL 60/40 or 70/30 VG/PG 0.3 ohm 30-50W DTL (direct lung) 70/30+ shortfills 0.2 ohm 40-70W DTL High VG shortfills 0.15 ohm 50-80W+ DTL (cloud chasing) High VG shortfills Every coil has its recommended range printed on the side or the packaging. That's your starting point. The chart above is a general reference if the printing's worn off or you've lost the box. How Does Wattage Affect Vaping? The short version: wattage controls how hot your coil gets, and that changes everything about how your vape feels. Crank the wattage up and you'll pull more flavour out of the liquid. That works up to a point. Go past the top of your coil's range and the cotton dries out faster than liquid can soak in. That's where burnt hits come from. Most people find the best flavour sits around the middle of the recommended range, not at the top. Vapour volume scales with wattage too. A 0.8ohm coil at 12W gives you a thin, discreet draw. Push the same coil to 20W and there's noticeably more cloud. People who want to keep things subtle tend to stay low. Cloud chasers go high, but they're running 0.2ohm coils in sub-ohm tanks, not pod kits. Then there's the throat hit. Warmer vapour feels stronger on the inhale. If your vape feels harsh, dropping 2-3W often fixes it before you need to change anything else. Worth trying before you blame the liquid. What Wattage Should I Vape At? [shotcode_multi_image_section_6] The most common setup we sell is a pod kit with a 0.8ohm coil and nic salt liquid. For that combo, 12-18W is the range, and most customers settle around 14-15W. That covers kits like the XROS series, Xlim series, and Caliburn range. If yours has auto-wattage, it'll set itself somewhere in that window. For 50/50 freebase in a pod kit, bump it up slightly. 14-22W with a 0.6 or 0.8ohm coil. Freebase needs a touch more heat than nic salts to get the flavour going. Sub-ohm setups with high VG shortfills run much higher. 40-70W with a 0.2-0.4ohm coil. Different world, different equipment, much more battery drain. Best Wattage for 50/50 E-Liquid 50/50 liquid is thinner than high VG, so it wicks faster and needs less power. Run it too high and you'll get spitting and burn through coils quicker than you should. On a 0.8ohm coil, 12-16W works well. On a 0.6ohm, 15-20W. The general rule with 50/50 is to stay toward the lower end of whatever your coil recommends. You won't lose flavour, and your coils will last noticeably longer. What Wattage Are Disposable Vapes? Disposables ran at roughly 7-12W with a 1.0-1.4ohm coil. No adjustment, no options. That's partly why they felt so consistent. If you've just switched to a refillable pod kit and want a similar feel, start with a 1.0 or 0.8ohm coil at around 10-16W. Pair it with nic salt liquid at 10mg or 20mg. That gets you close to the disposable experience without the waste. Our switching from disposables guide covers the rest of the transition. Common Wattage Mistakes The one we see most is people cranking wattage on a brand new coil. Fresh coils need 5-10 minutes to soak after filling. Start at the bottom of the range, take gentle puffs, and work up over 15-20 draws. Skip that step and you'll taste burnt cotton within minutes. Our priming guide goes through the full process. Running nic salts at high power is another common one. A 20mg nic salt at 40W will hit your throat like sandpaper and might make you lightheaded. Nic salts belong below 20W in an MTL coil. That's not a suggestion, it's how they're formulated. People also forget to adjust when they swap liquids. A fruit nic salt at 50/50 needs noticeably less power than a thick dessert shortfill at 70/30. Same kit, different wattage. It's worth checking every time you change bottles. And then there's the coil range itself. Every coil has one printed on it. Going above it shortens coil life. Going below it gives you a muted, flat flavour. The manufacturer tested those numbers for a reason, and they're almost always right. Related products & ranges Coils & pods Sub-ohm coils Vape mods More vaping guides Beginners guide to vaping (start here) Vape coils explained How to choose a vape kit

How to Get More Flavour from Your Vape
Getting more flavour from your vape comes down to five things: coil resistance, PG/VG ratio, wattage, clean cotton, and airflow. Most taste problems trace back to one of these being wrong. This guide covers each one with enough detail to fix the problem and links to deeper guides where they exist. If your vape tastes muted, bland, or just off, start here. Quick Flavour Checklist Before going into detail, run through these six checks. They catch the most common causes of weak or missing flavour. Coil age - your coil might be done. Burnt or gunked cotton kills flavour before anything else does. Our coil guide covers when to swap and how to prime. PG/VG mismatch - thick juice in a small coil won't wick. Thin juice in a sub-ohm coil floods. Wattage too low - the juice isn't vaporising fully. Turn it up in 2W steps until the flavour fills out. Wattage too high - the sweetener and top notes burn off before you taste them. Back it down. Airflow too open - vapour is diluted with air. Close it halfway and try again. Old or badly stored juice - e-liquid left in heat or sunlight breaks down. Fruit flavours lose punch first. If one of those six fixes the problem, you're done. For more detail on any of them, keep reading. Best Coil Resistance for Flavour Coil resistance affects how your juice heats and how the flavour reaches you. There's no single best ohm for flavour because it depends on your vaping style and what juice you're using. Coil Resistance Best For Flavour Character Juice Type 1.0 ohm and above MTL vaping, tight draw Crisp, defined, sharper notes 50/50, nic salts 0.6 to 0.8 ohm Restricted lung hit Balanced, good all-rounder 50/50 or 60/40 VG/PG 0.3 to 0.5 ohm Open lung hit Fuller, warmer, more rounded 70/30 VG/PG Under 0.3 ohm Full sub-ohm Dense, intense, heavy flavour 70/30 or 80/20 VG/PG Mesh coils give better flavour than wire coils at every resistance level because the heat spreads evenly across the whole wick. No hot spots means no scorched cotton and more consistent taste from first puff to last. For fruit and menthol flavours, higher resistance coils (0.8 ohm and up) tend to bring out the sharpness and tartness. Dessert and bakery flavours need more heat to develop, so lower resistance coils at higher wattage pull those creamy notes out. Our PG/VG ratio guide covers how ratio and coil resistance work together in more detail. Wattage and Airflow for Flavour Your coil has a printed wattage range on the side or in the box. Start at the bottom of that range, take a few puffs, then go up 2W to 3W at a time. Stop when the flavour peaks. Going past that point doesn't add flavour, it just burns through juice and coils faster. Airflow matters as much as wattage. Closing the airflow halfway concentrates the vapour and intensifies the taste. A wide open airflow dilutes the flavour with air, and a fully closed airflow can overheat the coil. Somewhere in the middle is where most people land for flavour. Goal Airflow Wattage Draw Style Strongest flavour Half closed Mid range for your coil Slow, steady MTL or restricted lung Balanced flavour and vapour Three quarters open Mid to upper range Moderate lung hit Biggest clouds Fully open Upper range Fast, deep lung hit Our wattage guide covers how to find the right output for specific coils if you want to go deeper on this. How to Change Flavours in a Vape Tank Switching flavours in a refillable tank or pod kit without getting leftover ghost taste from the previous juice takes a few steps. Vape the current tank down until the flavour fades (don't run it fully dry, that burns the coil). Take the tank apart and tip out any remaining juice. Rinse every part under warm running water. No soap. Let all the parts air dry on a paper towel for 15 to 20 minutes. Reassemble, fill with the new flavour, and let the wick soak for 3 to 5 minutes before vaping. You can use the same coil for different flavours as long as it's still in good condition. Strong menthol or cinnamon juices leave a stubborn residual taste though. If the ghost flavour won't shift after a rinse, swap the coil. For pod kits with sealed pods, changing flavour is simpler. Finish one pod and click in the new one. No rinsing needed. Why Your Vape Has No Flavour Flat or missing flavour is almost always one of four things. Check them in this order because the first is the most common cause by a wide margin. 1. Dead coil. Cotton breaks down and gunks up with sweetener over time. The taste goes flat before it goes burnt. If you've been on the same coil for more than two weeks with sweet juice, swap it and see if the flavour comes back. 2. Vaper's tongue. Your taste buds stop registering a flavour you've been vaping constantly. Switch to a menthol or mint juice for a day or two and your palate resets. Drinking water throughout the day helps too. 3. Wrong PG/VG ratio. Thick juice in a small coil mutes the flavour because the wick can't saturate. Check our PG/VG ratio guide and make sure your juice matches your coil. 4. Wattage too low. The juice isn't getting hot enough to vaporise all the flavour compounds. Turn it up in small steps and the taste should fill out. If none of those fix it, the e-liquid itself might be the issue. Old juice or juice that's been stored in heat loses its flavour over time. How to Get More Vapour and Bigger Clouds Cloud size comes from three things: high VG juice, low resistance coils, and high wattage. Getting all three right at the same time gives you the biggest clouds without wrecking flavour completely. Use 70/30 or 80/20 VG/PG e-liquid Use a 0.2 to 0.4 ohm mesh coil Run at the upper end of your coil's wattage range Open the airflow fully Take long, steady lung hits You'll lose some of the sharper flavour notes at high wattage with open airflow. That's the trade-off. If you want both big clouds and decent flavour, close the airflow one notch from fully open. Drop the wattage by 5W to 10W too. It's a compromise, but most people find the balance there. Related products & ranges Coils & pods Sub-ohm coils Shop all e-liquids More vaping guides Vape coils explained VG vs PG ratios explained What wattage to vape at

MTL vs DTL vs RDL: Vaping Styles Explained
MTL, DTL and RDL are the three main vaping styles. Each one gives you a different draw, different cloud size and works best with different e-liquids. Picking the right style from the start makes a real difference to how much you enjoy vaping. This guide covers what MTL, DTL and RDL actually mean, what kit and e-liquid each one needs, and how to work out which suits you. What Is MTL Vaping? MTL stands for mouth-to-lung and it's the most common style for new vapers. You pull vapour into your mouth first, pause for a second, then breathe it down into your lungs. It's the same action as smoking a cigarette, and that's why most people switching from smoking start here. MTL vaping uses higher resistance coils, usually 0.8 ohm and above. You run them at lower wattages between 8 and 25W. Airflow is set tight so you get a restricted draw with a noticeable throat hit. For e-liquid, nic salts between 10 and 20mg work best for MTL. A 50/50 VG/PG mix wicks well in higher resistance coils and carries flavour well. Freebase nicotine at 6 to 12mg also works if you want a sharper throat feel. MTL Specs Detail Coil resistance 0.8 ohm and above Wattage 8 to 25W Airflow Tight, restricted Nicotine 10 - 20mg nic salt or 6 - 12mg freebase E-liquid ratio 50/50 VG/PG Cloud size Small Throat hit Strong What Is DTL Vaping? DTL stands for direct-to-lung and it's aimed at vapers who want bigger clouds and warmer vapour. Instead of holding vapour in your mouth, you breathe it straight into your lungs in one go. It feels more like taking a deep breath than smoking, and it takes a bit of getting used to if you're coming from cigarettes. DTL uses sub-ohm coils below 0.5 ohm at higher wattages, typically 40W and above. Airflow sits wide open so you can pull a full lung hit without any restriction. You get bigger clouds, warmer vapour and more concentrated flavour. Shortfill e-liquids are the standard for DTL because of their high VG content. High VG mixes at 70/30 or 80/20 create thick clouds and need the extra heat from sub-ohm coils to vaporise. Keep nicotine at 3 to 6mg max for DTL because the large vapour volume makes anything stronger and very harsh. DTL Specs Detail Coil resistance Below 0.5 ohm Wattage 40W and above Airflow Wide open Nicotine 0 to 6mg (freebase or nic shot) E-liquid ratio 70/30 or 80/20 VG/PG Cloud size Large Throat hit Mild to none What Is RDL Vaping? RDL stands for restricted direct-to-lung and it's grown popular in the last couple of years. It sits right between MTL and DTL in terms of draw and vapour. You still inhale directly to your lungs like DTL, but the airflow is partly closed off so the draw feels tighter. You get more vapour than MTL but without the full intensity of DTL. RDL has picked up a lot of popularity because it gives you a good balance. You get decent clouds and solid flavour without needing to run high wattages or go through juice as fast as DTL. A lot of vapers land on RDL after trying both MTL and DTL and wanting something in between. Coils between 0.4 and 0.8 ohm work well for RDL at 15 to 35W. For e-liquid you've got more flexibility with RDL than either of the other two styles. Nic salts at 6 to 10mg or shortfills at 3 to 6mg both work. A 60/40 or 70/30 VG/PG mix handles the slightly higher wattage without being too thick for the coil to wick. RDL Specs Detail Coil resistance 0.4 to 0.8 ohm Wattage 15 to 35W Airflow Partially restricted Nicotine 6 to 10mg nic salt or 3 to 6mg freebase E-liquid ratio 60/40 or 70/30 VG/PG Cloud size Medium Throat hit Moderate MTL vs DTL: Key Differences At its simplest, the difference between MTL and DTL is the draw. MTL mimics the feel and action of smoking a cigarette. DTL is a completely different experience from anything related to cigarette smoking. Everything else follows from that, including the coil, wattage, e-liquid and nicotine strength you need. MTL DTL Draw style Mouth first, then lungs Straight to lungs Feels like Smoking a cigarette Taking a deep breath Coil 0.8 ohm+ Below 0.5 ohm Wattage 8 to 25W 40W+ Nicotine 10 to 20mg nic salt 0 to 6mg E-liquid 50/50 70/30 or 80/20 Clouds Small, discreet Large Throat hit Strong Mild Juice usage Low High Battery drain Low High If you're switching from cigarettes, MTL is the easier transition. The throat hit and draw will feel familiar from day one. DTL works better for vapers who've moved past that stage and want bigger flavour and clouds. RDL vs MTL RDL and MTL share some ground but they feel different in practice. MTL is tighter, lower powered and works best with nic salts at higher strengths. RDL opens the airflow up a notch and runs at slightly higher wattages for more vapour without the full DTL commitment. The biggest practical difference between RDL and MTL is e-liquid flexibility. MTL works best with 50/50 mixes and nicotine at 10mg or above. RDL handles both nic salts and shortfills, so you've got more choice in what you vape. If MTL feels too tight and DTL feels like too much, try RDL with a 0.6 ohm coil and the airflow half open. Best E-Liquid for Each Vaping Style [THREE_IMAGE_SHORTCODE] [shotcode_multi_image_section_11] Getting the right e-liquid for your vaping style matters as much as picking the right kit. The wrong VG/PG ratio won't wick and the wrong nicotine strength will either be too harsh or leave you unsatisfied. Style Best E-Liquid Nicotine Why MTL 50/50 nic salt 10 to 20mg Thinner liquid wicks in high-ohm coils, smooth throat hit DTL High VG shortfill 70/30+ 0 to 6mg Thick liquid needs sub-ohm heat, low nic avoids harshness RDL 60/40 to 70/30 nic salt or shortfill 3 to 10mg Mid-range viscosity suits 0.4 to 0.8 ohm coils One common mistake is using high VG shortfills in an MTL kit. High VG liquid is too thick for higher resistance coils to wick, so you'll get dry hits and burnt coils. Going the other way, running high nicotine nic salts through a DTL sub-ohm coil at 50W will be uncomfortably strong. Are Disposable Vapes MTL or DTL? Most disposable vapes on the market use an MTL draw. They use higher resistance coils with tight airflow and come filled with nic salt e-liquid at 10 or 20mg. Draw feels similar to a cigarette and they're built to mimic that experience. Some larger disposables and prefilled pod kits offer an RDL draw with a slightly looser pull and lower coil resistance. If you're moving from disposables to a refillable kit, an MTL pod kit with 20mg nic salt will feel the most familiar. Vaporesso XROS vs Luxe: MTL or DTL? The Vaporesso XROS range is built around MTL and RDL vaping. XROS pods use higher resistance coils at 0.6 ohm and above with adjustable airflow that goes from tight MTL to a loose RDL pull. If you want a cigarette-style draw with nic salts, the XROS is the range to look at. The Vaporesso Luxe range covers MTL through to DTL depending on the pod and coil you use. The Luxe XR Max 2 goes up to 80W with 0.2 ohm GTX coils for full DTL. Fit a higher resistance pod and it handles MTL just as well. It's the more flexible of the two ranges if you want to try different styles without buying a second kit. Vaporesso Armour G vs Luxe XR Max 2 Both the Armour G and Luxe XR Max 2 run up to 80W on Vaporesso's GTX coil range. They handle MTL with a 1.2 ohm coil and DTL with a 0.2 ohm, so both cover all three vaping styles. The Armour G has a 3000mAh built-in battery and a leather grip panel. On the Luxe side, the XR Max 2 has a slightly larger juice capacity and a different pod shape. If you're choosing between them for DTL specifically, either one will do the job at 55 to 80W with a sub-ohm GTX coil. For a full breakdown of each kit, check the product pages linked above. How to Pick the Right Vaping Style If you're not sure where to start, here's a quick way to narrow it down. Start with MTL if you: Are switching from cigarettes or disposables Want a familiar smoking-style draw Prefer smaller, pocket-friendly kits Want to use nic salts at 10 to 20mg Try DTL if you: Have been vaping for a while and want more vapour Enjoy bigger clouds and warmer draws Are happy using 0 to 6mg nicotine Don't mind going through more e-liquid Go for RDL if you: Find MTL too tight but DTL too airy Want decent clouds without high wattage Like the flexibility of using nic salts or shortfills Want one kit that sits comfortably in the middle A lot of vapers end up owning more than one kit. An MTL pod for when you're out and a DTL or RDL setup for home is a common combination. There's no rule that says you have to pick one style and stick with it. Related products & ranges MTL pod kits DTL tanks & mods Nic salt e-liquids More vaping guides How to choose a pod kit Nic salts explained

How Long Do Vape Coils Last? A Vaporesso Coil Lifespan Guide
A vape coil lasts anywhere from a few days to three weeks. The biggest factor isn't how you vape, it's what you put in the tank. Sweet e-liquids, wrong wattage settings, skipping the priming step, and chain vaping without breaks are behind most of the coil complaints we hear about. Fix those four things and your Vaporesso coils and pods will last noticeably longer. If you've come here looking for XROS-specific pod replacements, you'll find both generations on the COREX 3.0 and COREX 2.0 pages, with the matching kits over on the Vaporesso XROS series page. How Long Do Vaporesso Coils and Pods Last? Here's what we typically see from customers and from our own testing, not manufacturer estimates. Coil/Pod Type Light Sweetener E-Liquid Medium Sweetener Heavy Sweetener (Bar Salts) XROS pods (0.8Ω / 1.2Ω) 2 to 2.5 weeks 1 to 1.5 weeks 3 to 5 days GTX mesh coils (0.3Ω / 0.8Ω) 2 to 3 weeks 10 to 14 days 5 to 7 days GTi mesh coils (0.2Ω / 0.4Ω) 2 to 3 weeks 10 to 14 days 5 to 7 days That's based on moderate vaping, roughly 200 to 400 puffs a day. Heavier vapers will burn through coils faster regardless of juice. How Many Puffs Does a Coil Last? It depends. A quick one-second puff puts far less stress on a coil than a long four-second draw, so puff count alone doesn't tell the whole story. That said, most Vaporesso coils handle somewhere between 3,000 and 10,000 puffs. The sweetener in your e-liquid matters more than the number of puffs you take. Vaping Style Estimated Puffs Per Coil Light vaper (under 200 puffs/day) with low-sweetener juice 7,000 to 10,000 Moderate vaper (200 to 400 puffs/day) with bar salts 3,000 to 5,000 Heavy vaper (400+ puffs/day) with sweet juice 1,500 to 3,000 What Kills Vape Coils Early? If your Vaporesso coils are burning out fast, it's almost always one of these four things. 1. Sweet E-Liquid (The Biggest Coil Killer) Sweetener is the number one reason coils die early. Most sweet e-liquids use sucralose, and sucralose doesn't vaporise cleanly. It caramelises on the coil like burnt sugar in a pan, building up a dark crust that chokes the wick and ruins flavour. Bar salts and disposable-style nic salts typically pack in more sweetener than standard UK-made juice. If your XROS pods or GTX coils are only lasting a few days, your juice is probably the culprit. Try switching to something clearer and less sweet. The difference can be dramatic. We've seen coils that lasted four days on bar salts go two weeks on a lower-sweetener nic salt. The darker the juice in the bottle, the more sweetener it usually contains. Our nic salt and bar salt collections cover the full range. 2. Wrong Wattage Every Vaporesso coil has a wattage range printed on it. Go above that range and you'll overheat the cotton. Go below it and the juice doesn't fully vaporise. It just sits there caramelising on the coil. Coil Rated Range Best Lifespan Range GTX 0.8Ω mesh 12 to 20W 16 to 17W GTX 0.3Ω mesh 32 to 45W 36 to 38W GTi 0.2Ω mesh 60 to 75W 65 to 68W GTi 0.4Ω mesh 50 to 60W 52 to 55W Start low and work up until the flavour tastes right to you. The sweet spot for most Vaporesso coils sits at about 60 to 70% of the way through the rated range. Our wattage guide goes into more detail. 3. Poor Priming Skip the priming step and you can burn a brand new coil in three puffs. Once cotton is scorched, there's no saving it. Priming just means giving the wick time to soak up juice before you fire the coil. For XROS pods, fill up and wait at least ten minutes. For GTX and GTi tank coils, put a few drops of e-liquid directly onto the exposed cotton through the intake holes. Then put the tank together, fill it, and give it ten to fifteen minutes. Take your first five to ten puffs at a lower wattage than you'd normally use, then gradually bring it up. Our coil priming guide walks through it step by step. 4. Chain Vaping Puff after puff with no break? The wick can't keep up. Dry patches form on the cotton, those patches burn, and the coil starts dying from the inside out. Around 20 to 30 seconds between puffs is enough to let the wick catch up. It matters even more with thicker high-VG liquids because they move through cotton more slowly than thin 50/50 nic salts. How to Make Your Vape Coils Last Longer All five of these work with any vape, not just Vaporesso. Nail them all and you'll notice the difference within your first week. Pick a lower-sweetener e-liquid. Clearer juices with less sucralose make the single biggest difference to coil life. You won't lose out on flavour either. There are plenty of UK-made nic salts that taste great without hammering your coils. Stay within the recommended wattage. Check what's printed on your coil and aim for the middle to lower end. You'll still get good flavour, but your coil won't be working as hard. Prime every new coil. Ten minutes of patience saves you from binning a brand new coil on day one. It's the easiest habit to build. Don't let the tank run dry. Top up when you're down to about a quarter full. If the wicking ports are exposed to air, you're vaping dry cotton. Take breaks between puffs. Especially on higher-wattage setups like the Vaporesso Luxe or Armour Series. Twenty to thirty seconds between puffs gives the wick time to catch up. Which Vape Coils Last the Longest? Mesh coils outlast round-wire coils every time. The flat mesh strip heats the cotton more evenly, so there's less hot-spotting and less localised burning. Your cotton stays cleaner for longer. Vaporesso's GTX and GTi ranges are all mesh. Out of the lineup, the GTi 0.4Ω tends to go the distance because it runs cooler than the 0.2Ω at moderate wattage. For pod users, the newer XROS COREX 3.0 pods have stepped up from earlier versions with a hive mesh structure that heats more evenly. The 1.2Ω pod usually outlasts the 0.8Ω since it pulls less power per puff. Older COREX 2.0 pods are still around for vapers running earlier-generation kits. GTX vs GTi Coils Choosing between Vaporesso's two coil families? Here's how they stack up. GTX Coils GTi Coils Used in Luxe XR Max, Luxe X Pro, Luxe X2, Armour G, Armour GS iTank, iTank 2, iTank T, Gen Max, Target 200, Armour Max Coil style Single mesh Dual mesh (0.2Ω), single mesh (0.4Ω) Typical lifespan 1 to 3 weeks 1 to 3 weeks Wattage range 12 to 45W (varies by resistance) 50 to 75W (varies by resistance) Best for MTL and restricted DTL vaping DTL and high-wattage vaping Lifespan is roughly the same for both. Where they differ is vaping style. GTX coils suit mouth-to-lung and restricted DTL vapers, while GTi coils suit direct-lung vapers running higher wattage. Our guide to vape coils covers the full range. How Long Does a Vaporesso Vape Last? This is a different question entirely from coil lifespan, but it comes up constantly. The vape itself (battery, body, electronics) should give you one to three years. Batteries degrade first. A integrated battery will start losing capacity after about 12 to 18 months of daily charging. Kits with removable batteries like the Vaporesso Armour series go longer because you just swap in fresh batteries when the old ones fade. Our battery safety guide covers how to look after your battery properly. Signs Your Coil Needs Changing You'll usually know. But if you're not sure, look for these four things. Burnt or off taste. If your vape suddenly tastes harsh, charred, or just wrong compared to a fresh coil, that's your answer. Swap it out. Reduced vapour. Same wattage, same juice, but less cloud than before? The coil is gunked up and can't heat properly anymore. Darker e-liquid. Check the juice in your tank or pod. If it's gone darker than when you filled it, the coil is pushing residue back into the liquid. Gurgling or spitting. A tired coil can warp slightly or lose its seal, letting juice flood in where it shouldn't. That's the gurgling and spitback you're hearing. VG/PG Ratio and Coil Life Thick juice wicks slowly. If it can't keep up with the coil, you get dry hits, and dry hits kill cotton fast. VG/PG Ratio Works Best In Coil Impact 50/50 Most pod kits Wicks easily, good coil life 60/40 Most pod kits, Luxe XR Max Wicks well, slightly thicker 70/30 iTank 2, Gen Max, sub-ohm tanks Standard for DTL, larger wick ports handle it 80/20+ Large sub-ohm tanks only Too thick for pods, causes dry hits Trying to run a 70/30 or thicker juice in a pod kit is asking for trouble. Your pods will burn out in days. Stick to 50/50 vape juice for pod kits. For the latest specs and pricing on XROS replacement pods, see the COREX 3.0 and COREX 2.0 pages. Related products & ranges Shop coils & pods Vaporesso coils More vaping guides All about vape coils How to prime a vape coil

Vaporesso XROS Series Buying Guide: Which Model to Pick | Ecigone
Skip to shopping: browse the full Vaporesso XROS range - or read on to pick your model. This is a buying guide for the Vaporesso XROS series. The current lineup has four kits based around the same pod platform - the XROS 5, the XROS 5 Mini, the XROS 5 Nano, and the XROS Pro 2. Every model takes the same XROS pods from 0.4 ohm to 1.2 ohm, charges over USB-C, and handles both nic salts and 50/50 e-liquids. The difference comes down to battery size, screens, controls, and how much you want to tinker with settings. This guide walks through each one so you can figure out which XROS suits how you vape. We'll cover specs, pods, and the key differences between all four before you buy. You can also see every current kit, pod, and accessory together on the wider XROS lineup page. The Current XROS Lineup Vaporesso refreshed the XROS range in 2025 with three new kits and an upgraded Pro model. Here's what you're choosing between right now. Model Battery Screen Activation Modes XROS 5 1500mAh 0.88" colour Draw + button Smart, Normal, Power, Eco XROS 5 Mini 1500mAh LED only Draw only Smart (auto) XROS 5 Nano 1600mAh 1.09" touchscreen Draw + button Eco, Normal, Power XROS Pro 2 2000mAh 0.96" TFT Draw + button Wattage control (0.1W) All four take the same COREX 3.0 pods from 0.4 ohm up to 1.2 ohm, and older COREX 2.0 pods still fit too. All four ship with COREX 3.0 in the box. Every one of them charges over USB-C with fast charging as standard. XROS 5 - the everyday all-rounder The XROS 5 is the middle ground of the range. You get a 0.88 inch colour screen, a fire button and auto draw, plus four power modes to pick from. Battery's 1500mAh, which is 50% bigger than the old XROS 4 and lasts most people a full day on MTL. Four modes give you some control without overcomplicating it. Smart reads your pod and sorts the wattage on its own. Normal lets you set it yourself between 15W and 30W. Power cranks the output up for more flavour. Eco dials it back to stretch battery life when you're running low. Two COREX 3.0 pods in the box at 0.6 ohm and 0.8 ohm. The 0.6 suits a looser RDL draw on 50/50 juice and the 0.8 gives a tighter MTL pull on nic salts. USB-C 3A charging hits 80% in about 20 minutes. Fourteen colours available across leather, silk, opal, and carbon finishes. If you want a screen and some manual control but don't need the full wattage precision of the Pro 2, this is the one. XROS 5 Mini - the compact option The XROS 5 Mini strips it right back. There's no screen, no buttons, and you can't change the wattage yourself. You fill a pod, slot it in, and inhale. Smart Mode handles everything automatically by reading the pod resistance and picking the right wattage. Battery's the same 1500mAh as the full XROS 5, which gives you a full day on MTL without thinking about it. One COREX 3.0 pod in the box at 0.8 ohm. The airflow slider on the side is the only manual control you've got. Tighten it right down for MTL or open it up for a looser RDL draw. USB-C 2A charging gets you to 80% in 20 minutes. Fourteen colours here too, including some leather edition finishes. This is the one for anyone who's switching from disposables or just doesn't want to mess about with settings. XROS 5 Nano - the pocket pick The XROS 5 Nano is the odd one out because it weighs 86g and has a 1.09 inch touchscreen. That's a real touchscreen at 311 PPI, not just an LED indicator. You swipe through 29 wallpapers, check battery percentage, and swap between three power modes without pressing any buttons. This battery is actually the biggest of the three XROS 5 models at 1600mAh. Eco stretches it over a full day, and even on Power mode most vapers get through to evening. Two COREX 3.0 pods come in the box at 0.4 ohm and 0.8 ohm, so you've got an RDL and MTL option straight away. Eight colours available on the Nano, fewer than the other XROS 5 models. If you want the lightest kit in the range with a full touchscreen, this is it. The touchscreen takes a minute to get used to compared to button controls, but once you've figured out the swipe gestures it's quick to navigate. XROS Pro 2 - the premium choice The XROS Pro 2 is the one you go for when battery life matters more than anything else. 2000mAh is the biggest in the XROS range by a long way and most vapers get two to three days between charges. It's also the only XROS with wattage control down to 0.1W increments, giving you the most precise output of the four. The 0.96 inch TFT screen shows wattage, resistance, puffs, and battery level. Super Pulse mode is the key thing here. It monitors battery voltage and adjusts output automatically so your first puff matches your last. Your vape stays consistent at 5% battery the same as it does at 100%, with no weak hits as the charge drops. Made from aerospace alloy at just 65g despite the 2000mAh battery, and it comes with two COREX 3.0 pods at 0.4 ohm and 0.6 ohm. Seven colours to pick from and a slide lock on the side stops it firing in your pocket. If you vape heavily or just hate charging, the Pro 2 is the clear pick. XROS Pods: What Fits What Every kit in the current XROS range takes the same pods. You don't need to worry about buying the wrong one. Pod Ohm Style E-Liquid All 4 Kits COREX 3.0 0.4 RDL 50/50 Yes COREX 3.0 0.6 RDL 50/50 Yes COREX 3.0 0.8 MTL Nic salts Yes COREX 2.0 0.8 MTL Nic salts Yes COREX 2.0 1.2 Tight MTL Nic salts Yes COREX 3.0 is the newer pod with improved replacement coils. Flavour lasts longer and airflow's smoother than the 2.0 versions. If you've got old COREX 2.0 pods lying around they still fit in all four kits, so nothing goes to waste. If you're not sure which resistance to start with, the nic salt strengths guide covers which strength works best with each pod. And our MTL vs DTL vs RDL guide explains the different draw styles if you're not sure which one you prefer. XROS 5 vs XROS Pro 2 This is the comparison most people are weighing up. Both have screens, both have button activation, and both take the same pods. The differences come down to battery, precision, and size. Spec XROS 5 XROS Pro 2 Battery 1500mAh 2000mAh Screen 0.88" colour 0.96" TFT Wattage Control Mode-based (Smart/Normal/Power/Eco) Manual 0.1W increments Charging 3A (80% in 20 mins) USB-C (full in under 30 mins) Weight 68g 65g Super Pulse No Yes Colours 14 7 The XROS 5 gives you four preset modes and a smaller colour screen. For most vapers that's more than enough control. The Pro 2 steps it up with 0.1W wattage adjustments, Super Pulse for consistent output across the full charge, and 500mAh more battery. Pick the XROS 5 if you want something straightforward with enough options to tweak. Go Pro 2 if battery life and precise wattage control are top of your list. XROS 5 vs XROS 5 Mini Both share the same 1500mAh battery, but that's about where the similarities end. The XROS 5 has a screen, four power modes, and dual activation with a fire button. The Mini has no screen, one auto mode, and draw activation only. If you like adjusting wattage and seeing your stats on screen, that rules the Mini out. The Mini's the better shout for simplicity though. You don't have settings to configure or modes to cycle through. Smart Mode reads the pod and does it all on its own. It's the closest thing to a disposable experience you can get from a refillable kit, and that's exactly who it's aimed at. People switching from disposable vapes tend to find the Mini easier to get on with because there's nothing to learn. XROS 5 Nano vs XROS 5 Mini The Nano weighs 86g and has a touchscreen. The Mini doesn't have a screen at all. That's the biggest gap between these two. Both are compact kits aimed at people who want something small and portable. The Nano gives you three power modes and a battery percentage readout on the touchscreen. The Mini gives you Smart Mode and an LED that tells you roughly how much charge you've got left. If you want to check your exact battery level or swap between Eco and Power mode depending on your day, the Nano handles that. If you'd rather just inhale and not think about it, the Mini keeps it simpler. Which XROS Pod Should I Use? People get confused about this one, especially with COREX 2.0 and 3.0 both available. COREX 3.0 pods are the newer version and they're what Vaporesso ship in every current kit. They last longer before the flavour drops off and the airflow is smoother through the mesh coil. If you're buying replacement pods now, stick with the COREX 3.0 versions. For the resistance itself, it depends how you vape. The 0.8 ohm is the most popular because it gives a tight MTL draw that works well with 10mg and 20mg nic salts. The 0.6 ohm is looser for people who like a bit more vapour on 50/50 juice. The 0.4 ohm is the loosest draw in the range for full RDL vaping. If you're coming from a disposable, start with the 0.8 ohm COREX 3.0 and 20mg nic salt. It's the closest match to the draw you're used to. Still Available: XROS 4 Range The XROS 4 and XROS 4 Mini are still in the sale section while stock lasts. They won't be restocked once they've sold through. Pods are the same across both generations, so picking up a discounted XROS 4 kit won't leave you stuck for replacement pods later. Which XROS Is Right For You? For the latest specs and pricing on each model, see the Vaporesso XROS 5, XROS 5 Mini, XROS 5 Nano, and XROS Pro 2 product pages. Related products & ranges Shop all Vaporesso XROS Vaporesso XROS 5 pod kit Vaporesso XROS Pro 2 pod kit More vaping guides XROS 5 vs XROS 4 XROS Pro 2 review

What E-Liquid Works Best in the XROS Range
Ready to buy? Browse the Vaporesso XROS series or all e-liquids. The best vape juice for a Vaporesso XROS is a 50/50 nic salt or bar salt in either 10mg or 20mg strength. That's the short version, and it covers about 90% of what you need to know. Stick with this and your XROS pods will last longer, taste better, and give you fewer problems. The XROS range covers the XROS 5, XROS 4, XROS Mini, and XROS Pro. All of them use similar pod types and work best with the same style of e-liquid. The recommendations in this guide apply across the full Vaporesso XROS vape lineup. We've tested dozens of nic salt e-liquids and bar salts in the XROS 5 and XROS 4 over the past few months. These are the ones that work best, split by flavour type and budget. What VG/PG Ratio Works in a Vaporesso XROS? Your Vaporesso XROS is made for thinner e-liquids. A 50/50 VG/PG ratio is the sweet spot for every model in the range. E-Liquid Type VG/PG Ratio Works in XROS? Nic salts (10ml) 50/50 Yes Bar salts (10ml) 50/50 Yes 50/50 100ml shortfills 50/50 Yes Standard shortfills 70/30 No High VG shortfills 80/20 No Max VG 90/10+ No Thicker high-VG juices (70/30 or above) don't wick properly in XROS pods. You'll get dry hits, burnt replacement coils, and shorter pod life. Save those thicker liquids for sub-ohm tanks where they belong. 50/50 vape juice and standard nic salts are both 50/50 by default. If you're buying 10ml nic salts, you don't need to check the ratio since they're almost always 50/50. For shortfills, make sure the label says 50/50. Not all shortfills are the same ratio, so check before you buy. Best Nic Salts for Vaporesso XROS Nic salts are the go-to for most XROS users. They give you a smoother throat hit at higher strengths and work well with the lower wattage output of the XROS pods. Here are the nic salt brands that perform best in XROS pods. Brand Best For Price From Pablo's Cake Shop Dessert and bakery flavours £1.99 Elux Legend Nic Salts Ex-disposable users (Elux) £1.99 ElfLIQ Nic Salts Ex-disposable users (Elf Bar) £1.99 Bombo E-Liquid Complex, layered profiles £2.39 Gold Bar Nic Salts Ex-disposable users (Gold Bar) £1.99 Pablo's Cake Shop is one of our top sellers for XROS users. The flavour profiles are layered and come through clearly with COREX 3.0 pods. At £1.99 per 10ml bottle in both 10mg and 20mg, they're hard to beat on value. Birthday Cake - fluffy sponge with vanilla icing Biscoff Custard - caramelised biscuit with smooth custard Vanilla Custard - classic creamy profile Chocolate Concrete and Custard - nostalgic school dinner flavour Elux Legend Nic Salts are the obvious pick if you're moving over from Elux disposables. Over 50 flavours, all matching the original disposable profiles. The menthol and ice flavours come through cleanly in the XROS without any harshness. ElfLIQ Nic Salts are another strong option for ex-disposable users. If you liked Elf Bar flavours, these are the same profiles in 10ml nic salt form. They pair well with the 0.8 ohm XROS pods. Bombo E-Liquid stands out for more complex flavour profiles. Their Caramel Tobacco balances sweet and earthy notes without either one taking over. Worth trying if you're after something a bit different from standard fruit and menthol. Gold Bar Nic Salts are popular with vapers coming from the Gold Bar disposable range. Sweet, punchy flavours that translate well to refillable pods. Best Bar Salts for Vaporesso XROS Bar salts are nic salts specifically made to match disposable vape flavours. If you've just switched from disposables to a Vaporesso XROS, these will give you the closest match to what you're used to. The bar salt market has grown rapidly since the UK disposable ban in June 2025. Most major disposable brands now sell their flavours in 10ml nic salt form, and nearly all of them work well in the XROS range. Good starting points include Lost Mary Nic Salts for fruity and icy profiles, SKE Crystal Nic Salts for sharp, clean flavours, and Hayati vape liquid for bold, sweet profiles. Best 50/50 Shortfills for Vaporesso XROS If you vape at lower nicotine strengths (3mg or 6mg), 50/50 shortfills give you more liquid for less money. A 100ml shortfill with two nic shots works out far cheaper per ml than buying 10ml bottles. The key is making sure you pick a 50/50 shortfill, not a high-VG one. Standard shortfills are usually 70/30 or 80/20 and won't work well in an XROS. Doozy 50/50 Shortfills are made specifically for pod kits. The flavour is concentrated to account for the lower wattage output of pod vapes. The Caramel Coffee is a standout. Supergood does a solid range of fruit 50/50 shortfills. The Mango, Papaya and Passion Fruit is a popular pick with XROS users, and the cooling levels are well balanced. Does Vaporesso Make E-Liquid? Yes. Vaporesso launched their own e-liquid brand called Deliciu. However, we don't stock the Deliciu range at Ecigone. What we do stock is every major nic salt and bar salt brand on the UK market. You're not limited to one brand's flavours with a Vaporesso XROS. Any 50/50 nic salt or bar salt from any manufacturer will work in your XROS pods. That's one of the main benefits of a refillable vape. You pick the flavours you like from whichever brand makes them. Which XROS Pod Works Best for Flavour? Pod compatibility differs by device generation - the Vaporesso XROS 4 Mini pod kit uses the same XROS COREX pod family but with a 1000mAh battery and a more compact chassis than the XROS 5 line. Pod Resistance Draw Style Best For COREX 3.0 (0.8 ohm) 0.8Ω Slightly loose MTL Complex flavours, desserts, fruits COREX 3.0 (1.2 ohm) 1.2Ω Tight MTL Tobacco, menthol, simple profiles The 0.8 ohm COREX 3.0 pod is the best all-rounder for flavour with nic salts. It's a slightly looser draw than the 1.2 ohm pod and pulls out more flavour detail from layered e-liquids. The 1.2 ohm pod gives a tighter, more cigarette-like draw. It's a good match for simple tobacco and menthol flavours, and it uses less e-liquid per puff. Both pods work with every e-liquid mentioned in this guide. The difference is in the draw style and how much flavour comes through, not in what liquids you can use. Tips for Getting the Best Flavour from Your XROS A few small things make a noticeable difference to how your e-liquid tastes in an XROS. Prime your pods properly. Fill the pod, leave it to soak for five to ten minutes before your first puff. This stops dry hits and gives the wick time to absorb the liquid fully. Don't chain vape a fresh pod. Take a few gentle draws first, then build up. This helps the coil bed in without burning the cotton. Clean the contacts. Wipe the bottom of your pod and the contacts inside the vape with a dry tissue every few days. Dirty contacts affect the power and can dull your flavour. Swap flavours between pods. If you switch from a strong menthol to a dessert flavour in the same pod, you'll taste both for a while. Keep a separate pod for different flavour types if you can. For more on keeping your kit in good shape, our guide to cleaning and maintaining your Vaporesso covers the full process. Related products & ranges Vaporesso XROS series Shop all e-liquids Nic salt e-liquids More vaping guides Vaporesso troubleshooting (start here) PG/VG ratio for flavour & coils E-liquids explained (start here)

Vaporesso XROS 4 vs XROS 5: What's Actually Different?
Ready to buy? Get the Vaporesso XROS 5 or the Vaporesso XROS 4 - or see what is actually different below. If you're weighing up the Vaporesso XROS 5 against the Vaporesso XROS 4, this guide walks through what's actually changed between the two generations in 2025. The kits look almost identical sitting next to each other - same shape, same general size, near enough swappable on a shelf. The differences are where you use them day to day. I've had both on rotation for a while. From the Vaporesso XROS vape series, the 5 brings genuine upgrades in the places that matter for daily use. Whether they're worth it depends on what's bugging you about your current setup. Battery and Charging This is the big one. The XROS 4 runs a 1000mAh battery with 2A USB-C charging. Full charge takes about 30 minutes, and I'd get through most of a day on normal use before it needed topping up. Heavy chain vaping sessions? I was reaching for the cable by mid-afternoon. XROS 5 bumps that to 1500mAh with 3A fast charging. Vaping360 tested a full charge at 26 minutes, which matches what I've seen. The extra 500mAh sounds modest on paper but it's a 50% increase. I'm comfortably getting a full day out of it, sometimes stretching into the next morning if I'm not hammering it. The charging speed is where it gets silly. Ten minutes plugged in while you're making a brew gives you enough for hours. COREX 2.0 vs 3.0 Pods Both kits use Vaporesso XROS pods and every pod in the range works in either device. So you're not locked in. The XROS 4 shipped with COREX 2.0 pods. Solid flavour, reliable, lasted me about a week per pod with sweet liquids. XROS 5 introduced COREX 3.0. The Hive Mesh coils structure spreads heat more evenly and the upgraded cotton wicks faster. In practice: cleaner flavour that holds up longer before dropping off, and fewer dry hits when the liquid gets low. I'm getting a couple of extra days per pod compared to 2.0 on the same juice. Here's the thing though - you can pick up COREX 3.0 pods separately and use them in your XROS 4. You get most of the flavour improvement without buying a new kit. The XROS 5 does seem to squeeze a bit more out of them, but the pods themselves are the bigger upgrade. Older COREX 2.0 pods still fit both kits, so spares don't go to waste. Screen and Display The XROS 4 doesn't have a screen. It uses coloured LED indicators - green, blue, red - for battery level and power mode. Functional but basic. You learn to read the colours after a few days. XROS 5 has a 0.88-inch colour screen showing battery percentage, wattage, pod resistance, puff count, and six theme options. It's small but sharp. I didn't think I'd care about having a screen on a pod kit but checking exact battery percentage instead of guessing from LED colours is genuinely handy. Power Modes and Wattage Both max out at 30W. Both have Eco, Normal, and Power presets. The difference: the XROS 5 unlocks precise wattage control in 0.5W steps when you slot in a 0.4Ω pod. Every other pod resistance gives you the same three presets as the XROS 4. So if you're using the 0.8Ω or 1.2Ω pods with nic salt e-liquids, the power control is functionally identical between the two kits. The XROS 5 also holds power more consistently as the battery drains. With the XROS 4, I'd notice weaker hits once it dropped below about 30%. The 5 keeps hitting the same right until it dies. Airflow Both have the sliding airflow adjuster on the back. Both cover MTL through to restricted DTL. The XROS 5's slider moves more smoothly and has more usable positions between tight and open. It's not a dramatic difference. But if you're fussy about dialling in your exact draw - and a lot of ex-smokers are - the 5 gives you finer control. XROS 4 Mini vs XROS 5 Mini The Minis follow the same pattern as the full-size kits but stripped back. No screen, no fire button, draw-activated only. XROS 4 Mini XROS 5 Mini Battery 1000mAh 1500mAh Charging 1A USB-C 2A USB-C Pods COREX 2.0 included COREX 3.0 included Max output 30W 30W Airflow Adjustable slider Adjustable slider Screen LED indicators LED indicators Same 50% battery jump. Charging is faster on the 5 Mini too, though not as quick as the full-size XROS 5 since it uses 2A instead of 3A. If you want the simplest possible vape with no screen and no buttons, the Mini range is where to look. Where Does the XROS Pro 2 Fit? If battery life is your main thing, the XROS Pro 2 is worth knowing about. It has a 2000mAh battery into a body that weighs just 65g thanks to a magnesium alloy shell. That's the biggest battery in any stick-style pod kit I've seen. It charges at 2A (slower than the XROS 5's 3A) and takes about 50-60 minutes for a full charge. But you're charging less often, so it balances out. It has a 0.96-inch colour screen, the same COREX 3.0 pods, and Vaporesso added puff tracking with daily and weekly charts if you're trying to keep an eye on your usage. The Pro 2 is positioned above the XROS 5 in the range. If you don't want to think about charging for a full day or more, it's the one to look at. If the XROS 5's battery gets you through the day comfortably, save yourself the difference. Which Should You Buy? Upgrading from XROS 4? If the battery annoys you, the XROS 5 fixes it. If the XROS 4 does the job and you want better flavour, just pick up COREX 3.0 pods for it and save the money. First refillable pod kit? The XROS 5 is the smarter starting point. Better battery, better pods in the box, the screen is useful, and it'll age better. The XROS 4 is still a solid kit if you find it on sale. Want maximum battery? XROS Pro 2. Nothing else in this form factor matches 2000mAh at 65g. Prefer no screen, no fuss? XROS 5 Mini. Same battery as the full XROS 5, simpler operation. If you'd rather weigh up the whole Vaporesso XROS pod kit range in one place, the family page lays the four current kits and both pod generations side by side. For the latest specs and pricing, see the Vaporesso XROS 5 and Vaporesso XROS 4 product pages. Every XROS pod works in every XROS kit, so whichever you pick, you're buying into a system that isn't going anywhere. Related products & ranges Vaporesso XROS 5 pod kit Vaporesso XROS 4 pod kit Shop the Vaporesso XROS range More vaping guides How to use the XROS 5 Which XROS model to buy

How to Use the XROS 5: Settings, Controls and Setup Guide
Want the kit? Shop the Vaporesso XROS 5 and XROS pods. This is a step-by-step how-to guide for the Vaporesso XROS 5. Every button combo, every mode, and every setting for the XROS 5 and XROS 5 Mini kit - all verified against the official Vaporesso manual. If you're looking for the wider XROS series, you can explore the full Vaporesso XROS range. Jump to a section: Turn on and off Button functions quick reference Modes explained: NOR, PWR, ECO How to change wattage How to fill and refill pods How to empty a pod Airflow settings Screen, themes, and animation How to lock and unlock Puff counter and clear puff Charging and battery indicators XROS 5 Mini setup What e-liquid to use How long pods last How to Turn On and Off the XROS 5 Five clicks of the fire button within 2 seconds. That's it. The screen lights up and you're good to go. The same 5 clicks turns it back off. Once it's on, you've got two ways to vape. Hold the fire button while you inhale, or just draw on the mouthpiece without touching anything - the auto-draw kicks in on its own. XROS 5 Mini: No fire button on the Mini at all. Just inhale and the LED lights up. Nothing to turn on or off. Button Functions One button does everything on the XROS 5. The number of clicks within 2 seconds determines what happens: Clicks Function 1 click Fire the replacement coils (hold while inhaling) 2 clicks Change screen theme (6 themes available) 3 clicks Change mode (NOR/PWR/ECO) or adjust wattage (0.4Ω pod) 4 clicks Open the settings menu (lock, button on/off, animate, puff clear) 5 clicks Turn the kit on or off That 4-click settings menu is where most of the deeper options live - screen lock, button activation toggle, animation on/off, and puff counter reset. Once you're in, click to cycle through options and hold for 2 seconds to confirm. Modes Explained: What NOR, PWR and ECO Mean This is the one we get asked about most. You'll see three letters on your XROS 5 screen - NOR, PWR, or ECO. If nobody's told you what they stand for, it's not exactly obvious. NOR just means Normal. That's the default. Mode What It Does NOR Normal mode. Balanced power and battery life. PWR Power mode. Higher output for warmer vapour and more clouds. ECO Eco mode. Lower output to extend battery life. Cooler, lighter vape. How to change modes: Click the fire button 3 times within 2 seconds. The screen flashes the current mode. Click the fire button again to cycle through NOR → PWR → ECO. Stop clicking when you've landed on the mode you want. Wait 3 seconds and the kit saves your selection. Which mode should you use? Start on NOR. Most people stay there. PWR is worth trying if you want more warmth or vapour, and ECO is handy when you're out all day and can't charge. Note: These three modes only appear when you're using 0.6Ω, 0.7Ω, 0.8Ω, 1.0Ω, or 1.2Ω pods. If you're using a 0.4Ω pod, the 3-click shortcut gives you direct wattage control instead. How to Change Wattage This depends on which pod you've got in. With 0.6Ω to 1.2Ω pods: There's no specific wattage number to set. You pick between NOR, PWR, and ECO using the 3-click method above, and the kit handles the wattage for you based on your pod's resistance. With 0.4Ω pods (up to 30W): Click the fire button 3 times within 2 seconds. The screen shows the current wattage. Click the fire button to increase the wattage. Wait 3 seconds to save. The 0.4Ω pod lets you fine-tune output up to 30W, giving you more control over warmth and vapour than the three preset modes. How to Fill and Refill the Kit Same process on both the XROS 5 and Mini - they share the same XROS COREX 3.0 pods. Pull the black mouthpiece upward to detach it from the pod. It clicks off. Look for the fill hole next to the centre chimney. The fill hole is about 3.5mm wide. Place your e-liquid nozzle into the fill hole and squeeze gently. Fill until the liquid is near the top, but leave a small gap. Push the mouthpiece back on firmly until it clicks shut. Wait 5 minutes before your first draw. This lets the cotton soak up the liquid inside the coil. Don't fill through the centre hole. That's the airflow chimney, not the fill port. If liquid goes down there, you'll get gurgling and spitting. How to refill: Top up whenever the liquid drops below the wicking holes on the side of the pod. Keeping the level above the holes prevents dry hits and burnt cotton. You don't need to empty the pod before topping up. How to prime a new pod: Fill it and leave it to soak for 5 minutes. Then take a few gentle draws without pressing the fire button. This pulls liquid into the coil and prevents a burnt taste on your first real hit. How to Empty a XROS 5 Pod Switching flavours? You'll want to drain the old liquid out first. Pull the XROS pod out of the kit. Remove the mouthpiece by pulling it upward. Turn the pod upside down over a tissue or sink and let the liquid drain out through the fill hole. Wrap the pod in tissue and blow gently through the base to push out any remaining liquid from the coil area. Let the pod dry for a few minutes before refilling with a different flavour. Mixing leftover liquid with a new flavour won't damage anything. The taste will be muddled for the first few draws until the old liquid works through. Airflow Settings There's a slider on the back of both the XROS 5 and Mini. Move it to change how tight or loose the draw feels. Slide left (fully open): Loose, airy draw. More vapour, less throat hit. Closer to a direct-lung vape. Slide right (fully closed): Tight draw. Stronger throat hit, less vapour. Closer to a cigarette. Somewhere in the middle: Most people land here. Start halfway and adjust from there. XROS 5 Mini airflow: Works the same way. Same toggle, same range of adjustment. One thing to watch: don't close the airflow all the way. Fully shut, the pod can't draw liquid into the coil fast enough, and you'll get dry hits. Screen: Themes, Display and Animation The 0.88-inch screen on the XROS 5 has a lot into a small space. Here's what you're looking at and how to change it. How to change the screen theme: Click the fire button 2 times within 2 seconds. The screen cycles to the next theme. Keep double-clicking to cycle through all 6 options. Stop on the one you want and it saves automatically. What the screen shows: Display Element What It Means NOR / PWR / ECO Current power mode Wattage number (0.4Ω pod only) Current power output in watts Ω number (e.g. 0.8Ω) Resistance of the inserted pod Battery bar Remaining battery level Puff number Total puffs since last reset How to turn animation on or off: Tap the fire button 4 times within 2 seconds to open settings. Navigate to Settings. Hold the fire button for 2 seconds to confirm. Navigate to the animation toggle and hold for 2 seconds to switch it on or off. Turning animation off can help save a small amount of battery life. How to Lock and Unlock the Device There are actually two separate locks on the XROS 5, which trips people up a bit. Screen lock (stops accidental settings changes): Click the fire button 4 times within 2 seconds. Select SCREEN LOCK from the menu. Hold the fire button for 2 seconds to lock. The power on/off function (5 clicks) still works while locked. To unlock, click the fire button 4 times again. Button lock (disables the fire button but keeps draw activation): Press the fire button 4 times within 2 seconds. Select BUTTON ON/OFF. Hold the fire button for 2 seconds to toggle. With button activation off, you can still vape by drawing on the mouthpiece. The 5-click on/off function still works even with the button locked. The button lock is the one most people want. Stop the kit firing in your pocket while still letting you vape through draw activation when you take it out. Puff Counter and Clear Puff Your screen keeps a running tally of every puff since the counter was last cleared. What clear puff means: It just resets that number back to zero. Nothing else changes - your mode, wattage, and all other settings stay exactly as they were. How to reset the puff counter: Click the fire button 4 times within 2 seconds to open settings. Navigate to Settings, then hold the fire button for 2 seconds. Select the puff clear option. Confirm by clicking the fire button. It's purely a personal tracker. Clearing it won't touch your power or mode settings. Charging the Kit Both kits have a 1500mAh battery and charge through USB-C. Plug in, and you'll see the charge status straight away. Plug the included USB-C cable into the port on the bottom of the kit. Connect the other end to a wall adapter or USB port. The screen shows the charge percentage in real time (XROS 5) or the LED breathes red (Mini). 100% on screen or a solid green LED means fully charged. How to tell when your Vaporesso is charged: Indicator XROS 5 XROS 5 Mini Charging Screen shows percentage LED breathes red Fully charged Screen shows 100% LED stays solid green Low battery Red battery bar on screen LED flashes red when drawing Any standard USB-C cable works fine. Just avoid those fast-charge phone adapters - they push more power than the kit's made for. Setting Up the XROS 5 Mini The Mini is the stripped-back version. There's no screen, no fire button, and modes aren't adjustable. You inhale, it fires. That's the whole thing. First-time setup: Remove the sticker from the pre-installed pod if it's your first time using the kit. Pull the pod out and remove the mouthpiece. Fill the pod through the fill hole (not the centre chimney). Replace the mouthpiece and push the pod back into the kit. Wait 5 minutes for the coil to soak. Inhale through the mouthpiece. The LED will flash to show the kit is working. Mini LED colours: Green means the battery is above 60%. Blue means 30-60%. Red means below 30% and it's time to charge. Mini airflow: Same slider on the back as the XROS 5. Slide left for a looser draw, right for a tighter draw. The Mini uses the same XROS COREX 3.0 pods as the standard XROS 5. If you own both kits, you can swap pods between them. What E-Liquid to Use Thinner liquids work best. Thick, high-VG juice can't wick fast enough in a pod coil, so you'll end up with dry hits. E-Liquid Type Works With XROS 5? Best For Nic salts (50/50) Yes, ideal Smooth throat hit, higher nicotine strengths (10-20mg) 50/50 freebase Yes Lower nicotine strengths (3-6mg), good flavour 70/30 or higher VG Not recommended Too thick for XROS pods, can cause dry hits If you're switching from disposables, start with a nic salt at 10mg or 20mg. That's the closest match to what disposables use. For more on pairing flavours with the XROS 5, see our best e-liquids for the XROS 5 guide. How Long Do XROS 5 Pods Last? Depends on how much you vape and what liquid you're using. Here's a rough guide: Usage Level Approximate Pod Life Heavy (refilling 1-2 times daily) 4-7 days Moderate (refilling every other day) 7-14 days Light (refilling twice a week) 2-3 weeks Sweet and dessert flavours tend to shorten pod life because the sweeteners coat the coil faster. Fruit and menthol flavours are generally kinder on coils. When to change your pod: The flavour drops off, you get a slight burnt taste, or vapour production decreases. The liquid looking darker than when you filled it is another sign. Replacement pods come in packs with different resistance options across the COREX 3.0 and COREX 2.0 ranges. The 0.8Ω is best for a tighter, cigarette-style draw. The 0.6Ω gives a slightly looser draw with more vapour. Both pod generations fit every kit in the Vaporesso XROS pod kit line, so spares carry across if you ever upgrade. Kit Not Working? If your XROS 5 has stopped working, won't charge, or is showing error messages, we've written a separate troubleshooting guide covering every common problem. Read the full guide: Troubleshooting Your Vaporesso: Common Problems and How to Fix Them. For the latest specs and pricing, see the Vaporesso XROS 5 product page. Related products & ranges Vaporesso XROS 5 kit Vaporesso XROS pods Shop the Vaporesso XROS range More vaping guides XROS 5 vs XROS 4 compared Which XROS model to buy

Vaporesso Luxe XR Max 2 vs Luxe XR Max: Every Difference Compared
Ready to buy? Browse the Vaporesso Luxe series or all Vaporesso kits. Same AXON chipset, same 80W max output, same GTX vape coils, same pods. The Vaporesso Luxe XR Max 2 is a spec bump, not a redesign. Here's what actually changed from the original Vaporesso Luxe XR Max. What's Different Spec Luxe XR Max Luxe XR Max 2 Battery 2800mAh 3200mAh Screen 0.54 inch OLED, mono 0.96 inch TFT, colour Included coils 0.2ohm + 0.4ohm GTX mesh 0.2ohm GTX dual mesh + 0.8ohm GTX mesh Size 106.5 x 32.1 x 26mm 108 x 32.1 x 26.4mm Everything else is identical: 80W output, USB-C 2A charging, Luxe XR and Luxe X pod compatibility, full GTX coil range, adjustable airflow, Pulse Mode, Eco Mode, Smart Mode, and SSS leak resistant pods. The 3200mAh battery stretches to a day and a half at moderate wattage. The bigger TFT screen shows the same info in colour with switchable themes. The dual mesh coil uses two mesh layers for more even heating and works in the original kit too if you buy it separately. Which One Is For You Want the better battery and screen, go for the Luxe XR Max 2. Want to save money and don't mind the smaller screen, the original XR Max takes every coil and pod the newer kit takes. Already own the original and it's working fine? The dual mesh coils work in your existing kit. Battery and screen aren't a reason to replace a kit that's doing the job.[SHORTCODE_PRODUCT_LIST] [shotcode_products_section_1] Related products & ranges Vaporesso Luxe series Vaporesso kits All vape kits More vaping guides Vaporesso troubleshooting (start here) XROS 5 vs XROS 4 Best e-liquids for Vaporesso

Full Comparison: OXVA Xlim Pro 2 vs Pro 3
Just here to buy? Shop the OXVA Xlim Pro 2 or the OXVA Xlim Pro 3 - or read the full comparison below. Both the OXVA Xlim Pro 2 and Pro 3 vape kit sit in the middle of the Xlim range. They're built on different chipsets with different priorities. I've carried both daily and the differences are more than just a spec bump. This guide breaks down every upgrade between the two kits: battery, screen, chipset, pod compatibility, airflow, and day to day performance. If you're deciding between them or thinking about upgrading from a Pro 2, this covers everything you need to know. Side by Side Specs Spec Xlim Pro 2 Xlim Pro 3 Battery 1300mAh 1500mAh Max Output 30W 30W Screen 0.56 inch ultra-HD 1.05 inch HD Chipset X-TREME Photon Charging USB-C, 2A fast charge USB-C, 5V/2A (80% in 30 mins) Activation Button and auto-draw Button and auto-draw Pods Included V3 0.6 ohm and 0.8 ohm V3 0.6 ohm and 0.8 ohm Pod Compatibility V2, V3, EZ V2, V3, EZ Airflow Adjustable MTL to RDL Adjustable MTL to RDL, slide switch E-liquid Capacity 2ml (TPD) 2ml (TPD) Colours 12 options Multiple options Both kits run 5 to 30W variable wattage. Both take the same V3 top-fill pods in the box. The real differences are underneath: the chipset, battery capacity, and screen size. Battery: 1300mAh vs 1500mAh OXVA's Pro 2 runs a 1300mAh battery. For moderate vaping on a 0.8 ohm pod at 14W, that gets most people through a full day. Heavy use on the 0.6 ohm pod at 22W drains it faster, and you'll likely need a top-up by late afternoon. An extra 200mAh in the Pro 3 doesn't sound like much on paper. In practice, it adds a couple of hours of vaping time. On the 0.8 ohm pod I'm getting a full day and then some without reaching for the cable. Both kits charge via USB-C at 2A. OXVA rates the Pro 3 at 80% in 30 minutes. The Pro 2 is slightly slower but still quick enough that a lunch break top-up sorts you out for the rest of the day. Chipset: X-TREME vs Photon This is the biggest difference between the two kits and the one you'll actually feel when vaping. Under the hood, the Pro 2 runs OXVA's X-TREME chipset. It reads the pod resistance and sets the wattage range automatically. Flavour is good throughout the pod's life, and the chip keeps things stable at your chosen wattage. OXVA's Pro 3 runs the newer Photon chipset. It does everything X-TREME does, plus a few things that change how the kit vapes day to day. What Photon Adds Pulse power output: Instead of constant voltage, the Photon chip sends high-frequency pulses to the replacement coils. You get more stable output regardless of battery level. Automatic variable wattage: Reads the pod and adjusts the wattage range on its own. You can still set it manually if you prefer. Consistency at low battery: On the Pro 2, flavour drops off noticeably below 20% battery. The Pro 3 holds closer to peak flavour right down to low charge. I noticed the consistency difference within the first week. With the Pro 2, I'd start getting weaker hits around the 15% mark and know it was time to charge. The Pro 3 doesn't fade the same way. You still get a good vape at 10% battery. Screen: 0.56 Inch vs 1.05 Inch On the Pro 2 you get a 0.56 inch ultra-HD colour screen. It shows wattage, resistance, battery percentage, and a puff counter. Animated themes and a light bar along the bottom change colour as the battery drains. Outside in direct sunlight, it's readable but you need to angle it right. At 1.05 inches, the Pro 3 screen is nearly double the display area. OXVA's One Scan mode shows wattage, resistance, and battery all at once without pressing anything. The larger screen means bigger fonts and easier reading in any light. If you've used the Pro 2 and been happy with the screen, the Pro 3 is a noticeable step up. Not essential, but once you've used the bigger display it's hard to go back. Pod Compatibility Both kits come with V3 top-fill OXVA Xlim pods in 0.6 ohm and 0.8 ohm. Top-fill means you don't need to pull the pod out to refill. Pop the silicone plug, fill, and carry on. Your Pro 2 also takes V2 side-fill pods and EZ pods from older Xlim kits. OXVA built the Pro 3 around V3 pods with UniTech 2.0 coil technology. UniTech 2.0 is an upgrade in the pod itself, not the kit. It affects wicking speed and coil life on V3 pods across the range. Read more about this on our OXVA pod systems blog post. Pod Type Pro 2 Pro 3 V3 Top Fill (0.6, 0.8 ohm) Yes Yes V2 Side Fill Yes Check EZ Pods Yes Check If you've got a drawer full of V2 or EZ pods from an older kit, the Pro 2 will use them all. If you're buying fresh, both kits use the same V3 pods. Airflow and Vape Style Both kits have adjustable airflow that slides between MTL (mouth to lung) and RDL (restricted direct to lung). The 0.8 ohm pod at 12 to 16W gives a tight cigarette-style draw. The 0.6 ohm pod at 20 to 25W opens up for more vapour and a looser inhale. A dedicated slide switch on the Pro 3 controls the airflow adjustment. It stays in position better than the Pro 2's slider. If you've ever had a kit shift airflow in your pocket, the Pro 3 holds firm. Both kits handle nic salt e-liquids and freebase e-liquid at 50/50 VG/PG. The 0.6 ohm pod also handles 60/40 without wicking issues. If you want guidance on which e-liquid suits which pod, the OXVA e-liquid guide on our blog covers it in detail. Activation: Button and Auto-Draw Back on the original Xlim Pro, you had a button and auto-draw. OXVA dropped the button on the Pro 2, going auto-draw only. OXVA brought the button back on the Pro 3 alongside auto-draw. If you prefer to fire with a button, the Pro 3 gives you that option. If you've been using the Pro 2 and like auto-draw, the Pro 3 still does both. You pick whichever suits you. Build Quality and Design With 12 colour options including carbon fibre, artificial leather, and brushstroke panels, the Pro 2 has plenty of choice. Zinc alloy body at 67g. The glossy finish looks sharp but picks up fingerprints. OXVA kept the compact pod kit form factor on the Pro 3. Weight sits in the same range as the Pro 2. The 1.05 inch screen takes up more of the front face, giving the kit a more modern look. Both kits feel solid in hand. Neither is heavy enough to notice in a trouser pocket. If you're coming from disposables, both are similar in size to a larger disposable vape but built to last years rather than days. Who Should Get Which Stick with the Pro 2 if: You're happy with your current Pro 2 and the battery lasts your day. The X-TREME chipset still holds up and the screen does everything you need. No reason to upgrade unless the Photon chip or bigger screen appeals to you. Go for the Pro 3 if: You want the Photon chipset's consistency at low battery. You want a larger screen. You want the button back for manual firing. Or you're buying your first Xlim kit and want the latest version. Coming from disposables: Either kit works, but the Pro 3's bigger screen and button activation make it slightly easier to get started. The OXVA Xlim collection has both kits plus the Go 2 and 3 Ultra if you want to compare the full range. [THREE_IMAGE_SHORTCODE] [shotcode_multi_image_section_15] Other Xlim Kits Worth Knowing About Both the Pro 2 and Pro 3 sit in the middle of a bigger lineup. Depending on what matters to you, one of these might be a better fit: Xlim Go 2 is the stripped-back option. Auto-draw only, no screen, 1500mAh battery. If you don't want settings to change, this is the simplest OXVA vape to use. Xlim 3 Ultra launched alongside the Pro 3. Same 1500mAh battery and 30W output, but with a 2.2 inch touchscreen and Super Pulse chipset. More flavour intensity, more screen, more money. Xlim Pro 2 DNA has an Evolv DNA chipset with temperature control, Flavour Replay, and EScribe programming. Steeper learning curve but nothing else in pod vaping touches it for fine-tuning. All these kits share the same Xlim replacement pods by OXVA. Related products & ranges OXVA Xlim Pro 2 pod kit OXVA Xlim Pro 3 pod kit Shop the OXVA Xlim range More vaping guides OXVA Nexlim beginner's guide 0.6 vs 0.8 OXVA Xlim pods

Is the OXVA Xlim Worth It? 10 Reasons the Range Stands Out
Ready to buy? Shop the OXVA Xlim series or browse all OXVA kits. I've been selling OXVA kits since they first landed in the UK. I've tested every Xlim model from the original Pro through to the Xlim 3 Ultra and the DNA. I've also put the NeXlim and VPrime through their paces. This isn't a buying guide or a price comparison, it's a breakdown of the design and performance choices that make the Xlim range stand out. Here's why the OXVA Xlim range keeps outselling most of the pod kits on our shelves. [THREE_IMAGE_SHORTCODE] [shotcode_multi_image_section_16] 1. UniTech 2.0 Coils This is the biggest reason OXVA Xlim kits hold their flavour longer than most pod kits at a similar price. UniTech 2.0 is a replacement coils built into the pod itself. There's no separate coil head to unscrew or swap out. The mesh heats evenly across the full surface of the coil, so you're not getting hot spots that burn through the cotton early. You fill the pod, vape it, and when the flavour starts dropping off you put a fresh pod in. Most people get around 15 to 25ml of e-liquid through a single Xlim pod before it needs changing. The NeXlim takes it further with dual mesh, running two coil layers at once. Noticeably warmer vape and stronger flavour from the same size pod. 2. Pod Longevity Most pod kits on the market give you three to five days before the flavour goes off. OXVA Xlim pods regularly last one to two weeks with decent UK made e-liquid. What you put in them matters more than anything. Bar style juices loaded with sweeteners will burn through pods in days. Stick with a clean nic salts and you'll get a lot more life out of each one. Pod Type Typical Lifespan E-Liquid Capacity Xlim V3 1 to 2 weeks 2ml and 3ml NeXlim 10 to 16 days 4ml and 2ml VPrime 1 to 2 weeks 5ml and 2ml DNA SS 2 to 3 weeks 2ml The DNA stainless steel pods last longest because the temperature control chip stops the coil from ever overheating. You won't get a burnt hit from one of those. Full breakdown of every OXVA pod type is on our OXVA Pods page. 3. Cross-Kit Pod Compatibility This is something most other brands don't do. Buy Xlim V3 pods for your Xlim Go 2 and they'll also fit the Xlim Pro 3, Xlim 3 Ultra, and SQ Pro 2. They work in the Xlim Pro 2 DNA as well. Same pods across nearly every kit in the Xlim family. That means you can upgrade your kit without throwing away your spare pods. It also means you can buy in bulk and use them across more than one OXVA vape if you've got a couple on the go. Pod Works With Xlim V3 Xlim Go 2, Xlim Pro 3, Xlim 3 Ultra, SQ Pro 2, Pro 2 DNA NeXlim NeXlim only VPrime VPrime only EZ All Xlim Vape kits NeXlim and VPrime pods are their own families. They don't swap between each other or into Xlim kits. 4. The Full Kit Range OXVA doesn't make one kit and call it a day. The Xlim family now covers everything from a simple auto-draw pod all the way up to a DNA temperature control vape. Xlim Go 2 - entry level, auto-draw only, 1500mAh battery. Good starting point. Xlim Pro 3 - screen, adjustable wattage, 1500mAh. Most people end up with. Xlim 3 Ultra - Touchscreen at 1500mAh, same Xlim V3 pods. Xlim SQ Pro 2 - square body, touchscreen, 1600mAh. Xlim Pro 2 DNA - Evolv DNA chip, stainless steel pods, temperature control. NeXlim - dual mesh coils, 1500mAh, separate pod range. VPrime - 5ml pods, 0.2Ω capable, up to 60W for DTL vaping. Browse the full lineup on our OXVA Xlim collection page. 5. Leak Prevention Pod kits leaking has always been the number one complaint from customers. OXVA have done a decent job of sorting this out on the Xlim range. The V3 pods use top-fill, so there's no fill port on the bottom where liquid can pool and seep out. The silicone seals sit tight, and the internal pressure stays balanced so the pod doesn't flood when the temperature changes. I've carried Xlim kits in my pocket for years and can count on one hand the number of times I've had a leak. The odd time it does happen it's usually because I've overfilled the pod, not because of a design fault. 6. DNA Temperature Control The Xlim Pro 2 DNA is the one to look at if you want proper control over your vape. It uses an Evolv DNA chip, the same chipset you'd normally find in box mods costing three or four times the price. Temperature control means the chip monitors the coil heat in real time and caps it before it ever gets hot enough to burn the cotton. The result is consistent flavour from the first puff of a fresh pod right through to the end of its life. It pairs with stainless steel pods that handle temperature control properly. Regular Xlim V3 pods still fit the DNA kit too, they just run in wattage mode instead. If you've never tried temperature control vaping, the Xlim Pro 2 DNA is one of the most accessible ways to experience it in a pod system. 7. Adjustable Power Most pod kits give you a fixed output and that's it. The Xlim Pro 3, SQ Pro 2, and 3 Ultra all let you adjust the wattage from the screen. The chipset reads what resistance pod you've put in and suggests a wattage range for it. You can fine tune from there. A 0.6Ω pod at 20W gives a different vape to the same pod at 28W. Being able to dial that in makes a real difference to the flavour. For the Xlim Go 2, there's no screen and no wattage control. It reads the pod and sets the output on its own. Simple, and honestly fine for most people who just want to vape without thinking about settings. 8. Build Quality and Design OXVA uses zinc alloy frames on the Xlim range. They've got some weight to them without being heavy. The finish holds up well too. IML panel technology on the outer shells means the colour doesn't scratch off the first time your keys get near it. Size wise, the Xlim Pro 3 is about 114mm tall and 15mm wide. Slips into a pocket easily. The SQ Pro 2 uses a square body which gives it a different feel in the hand. The wider frame means they've fitted a bigger 1600mAh battery without making it bulky. The Xlim Pro 2 DNA picked up a Gold at the London Design Awards, so it's not just me saying they look good. 9. Awards I mention awards because they back up what I'm saying with third party proof. These aren't paid placements. Industry panels test and compare hundreds of kits before picking winners. Kit Award Xlim Pro Gold, London Design Awards 2023 Xlim Pro Best Open Pod System, MENA Awards 2024 (Vapouround) Xlim SQ Pro Best Refillable Pod Kit + Best MTL, MIST Vape Awards 2023 Xlim Pro 2 Best Pod 2024, Ecigclick The NeXlim and newer Xlim models are still building their award history. But when every generation before them has picked up industry recognition, the track record speaks for itself. 10. TPD Compliance and Safety Every OXVA kit sold in the UK is fully TPD compliant with 2ml pod capacity on refillable pods. The kits include short circuit protection, over-discharge protection, and an 8 second cutoff to stop accidental firing. Low voltage protection keeps the battery from draining too far. OXVA uses reputable battery cells too. That matters more than people think. Cheap cells in cheap kits are the ones that end up on the news. OXVA's approach to safety is one of the reasons we're happy to stock and recommend them as an authorised UK stockist. Browse everything we stock from OXVA on the OXVA brand page. Which OXVA Xlim Should You Get? Depends on what you're after. If You Want Get This Simple auto-draw, no settings Xlim Go 2 Screen, adjustable wattage, everyday carry Xlim Pro 3 Bigger battery, same Xlim V3 pods Xlim 3 Ultra Square body, touchscreen Xlim SQ Pro 2 Temperature control, longest pod life Xlim Pro 2 DNA Dual mesh coils, warmer vape NeXlim DTL cloud vaping, high power VPrime Related products & ranges OXVA kits & pods OXVA Xlim series OXVA replacement pods More vaping guides OXVA Xlim 2025 full round-up Are OXVA vapes MTL or DTL?

What’s the Difference Between BM600 & BM6000 Lost Mary Vapes?
Ready to buy? Get the Lost Mary BM6000 or the Lost Mary BM600. The Lost Mary Lost Mary BM600 vape kit and BM6000 pod kit are both prefilled pod kits from the Lost Mary collection but they're built for different vapers. One's a compact 600 puff kit that fits in any pocket. The other uses a reserve container to stretch a single refill pack to approximately 6,000 puffs. Both replaced Lost Mary's old disposable vapes after the UK ban in June 2025. They share the same flavour range, the same 20mg nic salt e-liquid, and the same draw activated setup with no buttons or settings. The differences come down to size, battery, puff count, and how the pods work. This guide breaks down exactly how the two compare so you can work out which one fits the way you vape. Lost Mary BM600 vs BM6000 Comparison [THREE_IMAGE_SHORTCODE] [shotcode_multi_image_section_18] Here's how the two kits stack up side by side: Spec BM600 BM6000 Approx Puff Count 600 6,000 Pod Capacity 2ml 2ml pod + 10ml reserve container Battery 750mAh 1,000mAh Charging USB-C USB-C Nicotine Strength 20mg nic salt 20mg nic salt Coil Type Mesh Mesh Draw Type MTL, draw activated MTL, draw activated Screen No (LED indicator) Yes (battery percentage) Size Smaller, lighter Slightly larger Refill Method Swap whole pod Swap pod + reserve container The BM600 is the simpler kit. One pod, one battery, nothing else to think about. The BM6000 has more going on with its reserve container, but it lasts roughly ten times longer between pod changes. What Does BM6000 Mean? The BM in Lost Mary's naming stands for their product line. The number after it refers to the approximate puff count. A BM600 gives you around 600 puffs per pod. A BM6000 gives you around 6,000 puffs per refill pack. The original BM600 and BM6000 were single use disposable vapes. After the UK disposable ban in June 2025, Lost Mary kept the same names but turned them into rechargeable prefilled pod kits. The names carried over, but the products are completely different now. You might also see references to the BM8000 and BM10000 Vision online. These are newer Lost Mary vapes with higher puff counts that follow the same naming pattern. How Does the Lost Mary BM6000 Work? The BM6000 uses a reserve container setup to get around the UK's 2ml TPD limit on pod capacity. Here's how it works. The kit comes with a 2ml pod and a separate 10ml e-liquid container. The container connects to the pod and tops it up on its own as you vape. You don't need to fill anything yourself. The e-liquid moves from the container into the pod gradually, keeping the pod topped up until the container runs dry. That's how you get approximately 6,000 puffs from a 2ml pod. The pod itself only holds 2ml at any one time, but the reserve container feeds it another 10ml over the life of the refill pack. Setting up a new BM6000 refill pack: Take the silicone plug off the pod Slot the pod into the kit Push the e-liquid container in until it clicks Wait 3 to 5 minutes for the pod to soak Start vaping The kit is draw activated. No buttons, no power settings, no menus. You inhale and it fires on its own. How Does the Lost Mary BM600 Work? The BM600 is more straightforward. There's no reserve container. You get a single 2ml prefilled pod that slots into a rechargeable battery. When the pod runs out after approximately 600 puffs, you pull it out and click in a fresh one. That's it. Setup is the same idea as the BM6000 but without the container step. Remove the plug, slot the pod in, wait a few minutes, and you're vaping. Draw activated, no buttons, no settings. The BM600 is closer to how a disposable vape worked. One pod, use it until it's empty, swap it for a new one. The only difference is you're keeping the battery and just changing the pod. How Long Does the Lost Mary BM6000 Last? The BM6000 refill pack gives you approximately 6,000 puffs. How long that lasts in days depends on how much you vape. Vaping Frequency Approx Days Per Refill Pack Light (under 200 puffs a day) 4+ weeks Moderate (200 to 400 puffs a day) 2 to 4 weeks Heavy (400+ puffs a day) 1 to 2 weeks Puff counts are always approximate and vary based on draw length and vaping style. Longer draws use more e-liquid per puff, so heavy vapers with long draws will get fewer total puffs. The 1,000mAh battery lasts a full day for most vapers before it needs charging. It charges through USB-C and takes roughly an hour from flat to full. The BM600 lasts for approximately 600 puffs per pod. For most vapers that's one to three days depending on usage. The 750mAh battery is enough to get through a full pod before it needs a charge. What Nicotine Strength Are Lost Mary BM6000 and BM600 Pods? Both the BM6000 refill pods and BM600 refills use 20mg nicotine salt e-liquid. That's the only strength available across both ranges right now. 20mg nic salt gives a smooth throat hit without the harshness you sometimes get with freebase nicotine at the same strength. It's the same level that was in the original Lost Mary disposables, so if you used those before the ban, the nicotine hit will feel the same. There are no 10mg, 5mg, or 0mg options for either kit yet. If you want a lower nicotine strength, a refillable pod kit with nic salt e-liquid at 10mg or 0mg shortfill gives you that flexibility. Which Lost Mary Kit Should You Get? It depends on how you vape and what matters most to you. If the smaller device suits your style, you can buy the Lost Mary BM600 vape kit directly. The BM600 suits you if: You're a lighter vaper who doesn't go through much e-liquid in a day You want the smallest, most pocket friendly option You liked the size and shape of the old 600 puff disposables You don't mind swapping pods more often The BM6000 suits you if: You vape regularly throughout the day and want fewer pod changes You'd rather carry one refill pack that lasts a week or more You want a battery percentage screen so you know exactly when to charge You prefer the longer lasting setup even if it's slightly bigger The vaping experience is very similar between the two. The BM6000 lasts longer between changes and has a bigger battery capacity compared to the BM600. You can view the full range of Lost Mary pods, and which devices the pods are compatible with. For vapers who want even more puff count from Lost Mary, the Nera 30K goes further with approximately 15,000 puffs per pod side and a full view screen. Our switching from disposables guide covers all the options if you're still working out what to go for. Related products & ranges Lost Mary BM6000 kit & refills Lost Mary BM600 pod kit Shop all Lost Mary More vaping guides Lost Mary flavours guide How to recharge a Lost Mary

Are Lost Mary Pods The Best Choice For Nicotine Free Vapers?
Going nicotine free? Browse 0% shortfill e-liquids and refillable kits. Lost Mary zero nicotine options exist in only one corner of the range. The Lost Mary BM6000 has 0mg refill pods and 10mg refill pods on selected flavours, and Ecigone is bringing the 0mg BM6000 kit and 0mg pods into stock. Every other Lost Mary kit and pod on UK sale, including the Nera 30K, Pro Max 7000, BM600, Hawcos Crystal Pro, Tappo, and 4-in-1, is 20mg nicotine salt only. That leaves nicotine-free vapers with two routes. The first is the new BM6000 0mg lineup once it lands in stock at Ecigone. The second is a refillable pod kit paired with 0mg shortfill e-liquid, which works today and gives access to the wider 0mg flavour market. This guide covers what nicotine each Lost Mary kit contains, which BM6000 flavours are on sale at 0mg and 10mg, and how to pick the right route for nicotine-free vaping. Do Lost Mary Pods Have Nicotine? Yes for most of the range, with one exception. The Lost Mary BM6000 has 0mg and 10mg refill pods available on selected flavours. Every other Lost Mary kit, including the Nera 30K, Pro Max 7000, BM600, Hawcos Crystal Pro, Tappo, and 4-in-1, is 20mg nicotine salt only. The 0mg BM6000 refill pods come in 5 flavours: Blueberry, Blueberry Sour Raspberry, Cherry Ice, Pineapple Ice, and Strawberry Ice. The 0mg refill pod and refill container set is designed to deliver approximately 6,000 puffs (varies by usage and draw style), the same as the 20mg version. The 10mg BM6000 refill pods cover selected flavours across the BM6000 kit and pod range. The 10mg flavours are Blueberry, Blueberry Sour Raspberry, Cherry Ice, Pineapple Ice, and Strawberry Ice - the same 5 flavours as the 0mg lineup, available in both the BM6000 kit and refill pod packs. Nicotine breakdown by Lost Mary kit range: Range Nicotine Strength Nicotine Type Approximate Puffs BM6000 0mg, 10mg, 20mg (selected flavours) Nic salt 6,000 per refill pod Nera 30K 20mg Nic salt 15,000 per refill pod (30,000 total in the kit) Pro Max 7000 20mg Nic salt 7,000 per refill pod BM600 20mg Nic salt 600 per pod Hawcos Crystal Pro 20mg Nic salt 600 per pod Tappo 20mg Nic salt Varies by pod 4-in-1 20mg Nic salt Varies by pod The 20mg figure holds across the Nera 30K, Pro Max 7000, BM600, Hawcos Crystal Pro, Tappo, and 4-in-1. The BM6000 is the only Lost Mary kit where 0mg and 10mg refill pods are available, and only on selected flavours. The wider Lost Mary pod range sits at 20mg by default. Is There a Nicotine Free Lost Mary? Yes, but only on the BM6000. The Lost Mary BM6000 Zero Nicotine prefilled pod kit and the matching 0mg refill pods exist in the UK market. Ecigone is bringing the 0mg BM6000 kit and pods into stock - the BM6000 refill pod collection is the right place to check stock status until the dedicated 0mg listings go live. The 0mg BM6000 refill pod and refill container pack is designed to deliver approximately 6,000 puffs per refill (varies by usage and draw style), the same as the 20mg version. The kit format and 2ml prefilled pod plus 10ml auto-refill container layout are identical to the 20mg BM6000 - the only difference is the e-liquid inside the pod is 0mg MaryLiq nic salt rather than 20mg. The 0mg BM6000 lineup at launch covers Blueberry, Blueberry Sour Raspberry, Cherry Ice, Pineapple Ice, and Strawberry Ice. No other Lost Mary kit currently has a 0mg version, so vapers who prefer the Nera 30K, Pro Max 7000, BM600, Hawcos Crystal Pro, Tappo, or 4-in-1 will need a refillable kit with 0mg shortfill instead. Lost Mary pods themselves cannot be opened and refilled. The pods are factory sealed and designed to be swapped whole when the e-liquid runs dry. Any attempt to break the seal damages the pod and voids any safety guarantee. Does Lost Mary Do Low Nicotine Pods? Yes, but only on the BM6000. The Lost Mary BM6000 has 10mg refill pods on selected flavours alongside the 20mg standard. The 10mg flavours are Blueberry, Blueberry Sour Raspberry, Cherry Ice, Pineapple Ice, and Strawberry Ice - the same 5 flavours as the 0mg lineup, available in both the BM6000 kit and refill pod packs.. No other Lost Mary kit has a 10mg option - the Nera 30K, Pro Max 7000, BM600, Hawcos Crystal Pro, Tappo, and 4-in-1 are all 20mg nic salt only. That is why most prefilled-pod vapers stepping down from 20mg end up looking outside the Lost Mary range. The wider UK prefilled-pod market launched on 20mg because that is what the majority of ex-disposable vapers were already using. 10mg coverage in the prefilled space is still limited. Vapers who want lower nicotine have one practical route - a refillable pod kit. A refillable setup covers every strength legally available in the UK: 20mg nic salt for full strength, the same level as Lost Mary prefilled pods 10mg nic salt for a lighter throat hit 0mg shortfill for completely nicotine-free vaping 3mg or 6mg freebase when a nicotine shot is added to a 0mg shortfill The Ecigone nic salt strengths guide covers how to pick the right level when stepping down from 20mg. Why Nicotine Free Vapers Are Better Off With Refillable Kits For 0mg vaping, a refillable pod kit paired with nicotine free shortfill e-liquid offers more flexibility, more flavour choice, and a lower running cost than any prefilled pod system on the UK market. A refillable kit is not locked into one brand flavour list. It is not stuck on one nicotine strength. And the e-liquid cost per ml is far lower than buying individual prefilled pods. How the two formats compare for nicotine-free vapers: Feature Prefilled Pod Kits Refillable Kit + Shortfill Nicotine Options 20mg only (most brands) 0mg, 3mg, 6mg, 10mg, 20mg Flavour Choice Limited to what the brand makes Hundreds of e-liquids from many brands Bottle Size 2ml per pod 100ml shortfill bottles Ongoing Cost Higher per ml of e-liquid Lower per ml of e-liquid Flexibility Swap the whole pod when empty Refill with any e-liquid at any time Flavour matters more in nicotine free vaping than people expect. Without nicotine, there is no throat hit to lean on, so the e-liquid recipe carries the whole sensation. 50/50 VG/PG shortfills tend to give cleaner, more accurate flavour in pod kits than most prefilled options. Best Zero Nicotine E-Liquids for Pod Kits For the refillable route, 50/50 shortfill e-liquids are the format to look at. The 50/50 VG/PG ratio works well in pod kit replacement coils and the 100ml bottles last a long time when nicotine is not driving heavy chain-vaping. UK 0mg shortfill brands stocked at Ecigone include Doozy Vape, Zeus Juice, Dinner Lady, and IVG, with profiles spanning fruit, menthol, dessert, and bakery. Browse the full 0mg shortfill range at Ecigone to filter by VG ratio and flavour family. Every 100ml shortfill is sold at 0mg by default. Adding a 10ml nicotine shot lifts a 100ml shortfill to 3mg in a 60ml bottle, which is a common step for vapers who want a small amount of nicotine without going back to nic salt strength. For vapers who prefer some nicotine but want to step down from 20mg, 10mg nic salt e-liquids work well in pod kits and sit between 0mg and the 20mg Lost Mary prefilled standard. What Are the Best Zero Nicotine Pod Vape Alternatives? For UK vapers searching for "0mg vape pods" or "nicotine free pod vape", the practical options break into two groups. Option 1: A refillable pod kit filled with 0mg shortfill e-liquid. This is the most flexible long-term route. Choose a kit, fill with any 0mg e-liquid, and vape. The kit body recharges and the same pods get cleaned and reused for many bottles. Browse refillable pod kits at Ecigone to start. Option 2: Sticking with prefilled until a nicotine-free prefilled product launches. A handful of brands now sell prefilled 0mg pods in dedicated nicotine-free product lines. None are made by Lost Mary at the time of writing. Anyone holding out for a Lost Mary 0mg pod release will need to wait for an official Lost Mary or Ecigone announcement. Until then, Option 1 is the working route for nicotine-free pod vaping. What Happened After the Disposable Ban? The UK banned single-use disposable vapes on 1st June 2025. That ban included 0mg disposables, so vapers who used those lost their go-to option overnight. The Ecigone Lost Mary vape ban guide covers the full regulatory timeline. Prefilled pod kits from Lost Mary, Elf Bar, SKE, and others stepped in as the post-ban replacement. Most launched with 20mg pods only, leaving nicotine-free vapers without a like-for-like swap in the prefilled format. The refillable vape market has grown faster since the ban as a result. There are more refillable pod kits and a far bigger 0mg e-liquid range available than there was before June 2025. The Ecigone guide to switching from disposables covers the format-by-format options for ex-disposable vapers, and the Lost Mary recharge guide covers charging if a Lost Mary 20mg kit is being kept alongside a refillable for nicotine-free sessions. For more on the wider Lost Mary range, the Ecigone Lost Mary flavours guide breaks down the flavour list across every kit, and the Lost Mary safety guide covers ingredients and TPD compliance for vapers weighing up the trade-offs of staying on 20mg. Related products & ranges Lost Mary pods & refills 0% shortfill e-liquids Refillable vape kits More vaping guides Are Lost Mary vapes safe? Switching from disposables Disposable flavours as e-liquids

Are Lost Mary Vapes Safe? What's Actually In Them
People searching for Lost Mary safety information usually want straight answers, not marketing. This page covers Lost Mary ingredients, what the UK regulations say, and the specific safety questions that come up most often. Ecigone sells Lost Mary vape products, so this is not a neutral source. For independent health guidance on vaping, the NHS vaping page has the most up-to-date UK position. What this guide does is set out exactly what Lost Mary products contain, how the products are regulated by the MHRA in the UK, and how to spot counterfeits that bypass those rules. What Is In a Lost Mary Vape? Every Lost Mary vape sold legally in the UK contains the same four base ingredients. There is nothing unusual in the mix compared to other UK legal e-liquids registered with the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA). Ingredient What It Is Propylene Glycol (PG) Carries the flavour and creates the throat hit. Also used in food, medicine, and cosmetic products. Vegetable Glycerine (VG) Creates the visible vapour cloud. Also used in food and pharmaceutical products. Nicotine Salt 20mg nic salt in every prefilled Lost Mary pod. Lost Mary bottled nic salts are sold in 10mg and 20mg. Food-Grade Flavourings The flavour compounds that create each pod profile. Vary by flavour. That is the full list. No tobacco. No tar. No carbon monoxide. The e-liquid is heated by a replacement coils to create vapour rather than burned, so there is no combustion involved. Are Lost Mary Vapes Bad for Vapers? No vape is risk-free. The current UK position from the NHS and Public Health England is that vaping is substantially less harmful than smoking cigarettes for adult smokers who switch completely. Lost Mary products are subject to the same MHRA notification, ingredient limits, and emissions testing as every other UK legal vape. Lost Mary vapes do contain nicotine, which is addictive. The 20mg nic salt strength on every prefilled pod is the UK legal maximum. People who do not smoke and who do not currently vape are advised by the NHS not to start. People under 18 cannot legally buy any Lost Mary product in the UK. Anyone with a specific medical condition, who is pregnant, or who is unsure about whether vaping is right for their personal circumstances should speak to a GP or pharmacist rather than rely on a retailer page. Do Lost Mary Vapes Contain Diacetyl? No. Diacetyl is banned in e-liquids sold in the UK under the Tobacco Products Directive (TPD). All Lost Mary products sold through UK authorised retailers are TPD compliant and do not contain diacetyl. Diacetyl is a buttery flavouring compound that was linked to lung problems in factory workers exposed to very high airborne concentrations. It was used in some early US e-liquids years ago. UK e-liquids have not been allowed to contain diacetyl for several years now. The diacetyl-free position only holds for Lost Mary products bought through an authorised UK retailer. Counterfeit vapes from unofficial sources skip the TPD process and there is no way to know what they contain. Do Lost Mary Vapes Contain Formaldehyde? Formaldehyde is not an ingredient in Lost Mary e-liquid. Trace amounts can be produced when any e-liquid is heated, but the amounts are far below what cigarette smoke contains under normal vaping conditions. Most of the formaldehyde concern in vaping came from early laboratory studies that overheated coils at temperatures higher than any real-world vape would reach. Under normal use with a working coil and a fresh pod, formaldehyde production is minimal. Lost Mary prefilled pods are sealed and run at a fixed wattage with no adjustable settings. The coil cannot be overheated because the kit body has no power-adjustment buttons. The wattage stays at the level Lost Mary set it to during manufacture. Are Lost Mary Vapes TPD Compliant? Yes. Every Lost Mary product on legal UK sale must meet TPD regulations. In practice that covers: 2ml maximum pod capacity (the BM6000 uses a 2ml pod with a separate 10ml auto-refill container) 20mg maximum nicotine strength for prefilled products Banned ingredients including diacetyl are not permitted Emissions testing before products can be sold in the UK Child-resistant packaging on all products Health warnings printed on packaging MHRA notification number on the packaging of every prefilled pod kit TPD compliance is checked at the manufacturing and import stage. Products that fail do not reach UK shelves through legitimate supply chains. This is also why authorised retailers matter - counterfeit Lost Mary products that skip this process have no guarantee of meeting any safety standard. Is Lost Mary a Good Vape Brand? Lost Mary is one of the best-selling vape brands in the UK. The brand is made by Shenzhen iMiracle Technology, the same parent company behind Elf Bar. The brand launched with disposable vapes and moved fully to prefilled pod kits after the UK disposable ban on 1st June 2025. For the regulatory background on what was banned and what stayed legal, see the Ecigone Lost Mary vape ban guide. The current Lost Mary prefilled kit range at Ecigone: Lost Mary BM600 pod kit - approximately 600 puffs per pod, compact pocket size Lost Mary BM6000 pod kit - approximately 6,000 puffs per refill pod with 10ml auto-refill container Lost Mary Nera 30K pod kit - approximately 30,000 puffs total across two prefilled pods, with a screen that displays battery and pod status Lost Mary Pro Max 7000 pod kit - approximately 7,000 puffs per refill pod, with replaceable Pro Max 7000 refill pods Lost Mary Hawcos Crystal Pro - clear-pod design with replaceable Crystal Pro refill pods Lost Mary Tappo - compact closed-pod kit with replaceable Tappo refill pods Lost Mary 4-in-1 pod kit - holds four prefilled pods at once with a switch to change flavour chamber The main strength of the Lost Mary range is simplicity. Every prefilled kit is draw-activated with no buttons or settings. Slot in a pod and vape. Build quality is consistent and the flavour range is one of the largest in the UK prefilled market - see the Ecigone Lost Mary flavours guide for the full taste profile breakdown. The main limitation is nicotine strength choice. Prefilled Lost Mary pods are only sold at 20mg nic salt. Vapers who want lower strengths or 0mg need to switch to a refillable kit filled with a chosen nic salt e-liquid. Who Makes Lost Mary Vapes? Lost Mary is made by Shenzhen iMiracle Technology Co., Ltd, based in Shenzhen, China. The same company is behind Elf Bar, one of the other top-selling vape brands in the UK. The brand name does not have a deep meaning behind it. iMiracle launched Lost Mary as a separate brand to sit alongside Elf Bar in the prefilled and disposable market. Both brands share manufacturing standards and quality control processes but carry distinct product lines and flavour ranges. Lost Mary products on UK sale go through the same TPD notification and MHRA testing process as every other legal vape product. The products are imported through authorised UK distributors and carry the regulatory markings on packaging. Lost Mary kits also need to be charged correctly to keep the battery and coil performing as designed - the Ecigone Lost Mary recharge guide covers the charging process for every kit in the range. How to Spot Fake Lost Mary Vapes Counterfeit Lost Mary products are common, especially from market stalls, social media sellers, and unverified online shops. Fakes do not go through TPD or MHRA testing, and there is no way to know what ingredients counterfeit products contain. Signs of a counterfeit Lost Mary: Spelling errors on the packaging or labelling Wrong colours on buttons, screen surrounds, or kit body compared to official images Missing or incorrect QR code (genuine products carry a verification code that scans to the official Lost Mary site) Unusual taste or flavour that does not match the named profile Suspiciously low pricing well below normal UK retail No TPD or MHRA health warnings on packaging No batch or production code on the box Lost Mary runs a verification tool on the official brand website where the QR code on a genuine pack can be scanned to confirm authenticity. Buying from an authorised UK retailer like Ecigone removes the counterfeit risk entirely - every Lost Mary product on the Ecigone site is sourced from official UK distributors with the full TPD paper trail. Related products & ranges Lost Mary range Lost Mary pods & refills Lost Mary BM6000 & refills More vaping guides Lost Mary flavour profiles Are Lost Mary pods nicotine free? Are Lost Mary vapes being banned?

OXVA Xlim Pro 2 DNA Review: Evolv Chip Tested
Ready to buy? Browse the OXVA Xlim series and replacement pods. OXVA's Xlim Pro 2 DNA vape kit is the same Pro 2 body with an Evolv DNA chip inside. First pod kit to carry one. I've had the forged carbon version for weeks now and the DNA chip does change things, but not all in the ways you'd expect. Battery life is noticeably longer from the same 1300mAh cell. Replay mode locks in a good puff and repeats it. Temperature control stops dry hits completely with the stainless steel pods. Those three things are what matter. Everything else is a bonus for people who like to tinker. This review is based on daily use alongside the standard Xlim Pro 2, not first impressions. Specs Spec Detail Battery 1300mAh built-in Output 5 to 30W Screen 0.56 inch colour display Charging USB-C (about 45 minutes to full) Chipset Evolv DNA Activation Auto-draw and button fire Pod Capacity 2ml (UK TPD) Airflow Adjustable, MTL to RDL Pods Included 0.6 ohm SS and 0.8 ohm SS (top-fill) Pod Compatibility All Xlim pods (V2, V3, EZ, SS) [THREE_IMAGE_SHORTCODE] [shotcode_multi_image_section_19] What the DNA Chip Actually Does Standard pod kit chips fire at a set wattage. The Evolv DNA chip inside the Pro 2 DNA makes 30,000 micro-adjustments per second. It reads coil resistance, temperature, and battery voltage in real time and adjusts power on the fly. In practice, three things come from this: Better battery efficiency - the chip only sends the power the coil needs at that exact moment, not a fixed amount Replay mode - locks in a specific puff profile and recreates it every time Temperature control - sets a ceiling so the coil can't overheat, killing dry hits before they happen You don't need to understand any of that to use the kit. It works out of the box with the settings OXVA dialled in. But if you want to know why the battery lasts longer and the flavour stays more consistent, that's the answer. Battery Life Same 1300mAh battery as the standard Pro 2. Different results. I ran both kits side by side for a week. Same pods, same 10mg dessert nic salt, same vaping pattern. The standard Pro 2 got me through the day. The DNA version pushed four hours past that, well into the next morning. That's not a bigger battery. It's a better chip. The DNA doesn't waste power overshooting or undershooting wattage like a standard chip does. It sends exactly what the coil needs and nothing more. For heavy use at around 400 puffs a day, I'm getting a day and a half per charge. USB-C charging takes about 45 minutes from flat to full, with a faster charge up to 80% then a slower taper to protect the cell. Replay Mode Take a puff you like right warmth, right flavour intensity, right throat hit. Press the button to save it. From that point, every puff tries to match those exact conditions. From that saved puff, the DNA chip remembers the power curve, coil temperature, and resistance profile. It adjusts in real time to recreate it regardless of battery level or coil age. I've been using replay mode on a 0.6 ohm SS pod with 10mg vanilla custard nic salt. Puff one tastes like puff one hundred. The consistency is the single biggest difference between the DNA and standard Pro 2. On a normal chip, flavour drifts as the battery drops or the coil ages. Replay mode compensates for both. Not every vaper will care about this. If you just want to fill and go, you won't miss it. But once you've used it, you notice the inconsistency on kits without it. Temperature Control Stainless steel pods open up temperature control. Set a maximum temperature and the coil won't go past it. When e-liquid runs low, instead of a burnt hit, the kit dials back power on its own. I tested this by vaping a pod almost dry on purpose. No burnt taste. Flavour faded gradually and the hit got lighter, but nothing unpleasant. On a standard chip, that same pod would've tasted like charcoal. Temperature control only works with the SS (stainless steel) pods. Kanthal pods from the standard V2 and V3 range still work in the kit but fire in standard wattage mode only. Pro 2 DNA vs Standard Pro 2 This is the comparison most people are searching for. Pro 2 DNA Standard Pro 2 Battery 1300mAh 1300mAh Battery life (real) Day and a half One day Chipset Evolv DNA X-TREME Replay mode Yes No Temp control Yes (SS pods) No Escribe software Yes No Pods All Xlim pods All Xlim pods Output 30W 30W Screen 0.56 inch colour 0.56 inch colour Airflow Adjustable MTL to RDL Adjustable MTL to RDL Auto-draw Yes Yes Button fire Yes Yes Same body. Same pods. Same airflow. The DNA chip is the only physical difference. It changes battery life, adds replay mode and temp control, and opens up Escribe software customisation. If your standard Pro 2 does everything you need and you're happy with the battery, there's no urgent reason to swap. If you want longer battery life, replay consistency, or dry hit protection, the DNA version is the upgrade. Escribe Software and Themes Plug the Pro 2 DNA into your PC via USB-C and Escribe opens up full customisation. Power curves, screen themes, wallpapers, temperature profiles, and display layout. Most people won't touch this. Out of the box settings work well. You can dial in a custom power curve for a specific e-liquid. Set different profiles for MTL and RDL pods. Escribe handles all of it. Themes and wallpapers can be changed through Escribe too. You can upload custom backgrounds or pick from existing options. A few people are searching for "oxva dna theme" and this is where you change it - not on the kit itself, through the PC software. Storage Mode If you're not using the kit for a while, Escribe has a storage mode that drops the battery to a safe level for long-term storage. Keeps the cell healthy if you're shelving it between uses. Fill Pod Error Some users are seeing a "fill pod" error on screen. This happens when the kit detects the pod isn't seated properly or the contacts aren't connecting. Pull the pod out. Check the bottom contacts for e-liquid residue. Wipe clean with a tissue. Reseat the pod firmly until it clicks. If the error keeps showing, try a different pod - a faulty contact on the pod itself can trigger it. Pod Compatibility Every Xlim pod works in the Pro 2 DNA. V2 side-fill, V3 top-fill, EZ 3ml, and the new SS stainless steel pods. No need to buy special pods for the DNA version. For temperature control and replay mode, use the SS pods. They're the only ones that support those features. Kanthal pods (V2, V3, EZ) work fine for standard wattage vaping but can't do temp control. Browse the Xlim range for the full range of resistance options. Pod Type Resistance Fill TC/Replay SS 0.6 ohm Stainless steel 0.6 ohm Top-fill Yes SS 0.8 ohm Stainless steel 0.8 ohm Top-fill Yes V3 0.6 ohm Kanthal 0.6 ohm Top-fill No V3 0.8 ohm Kanthal 0.8 ohm Top-fill No V2 0.6 ohm Kanthal 0.6 ohm Side-fill No V2 0.8 ohm Kanthal 0.8 ohm Side-fill No EZ 0.6 ohm Kanthal 0.6 ohm Snap-top No EZ 0.8 ohm Kanthal 0.8 ohm Snap-top No Colours Several colour finishes are available for the Pro 2 DNA: Forged Carbon (the one I've been testing) Black Leather Brown Leather Gunmetal Wood Arctic Ice Forged carbon is the one to get. The pattern shifts depending on the light. Under indoor lighting it looks dark with subtle texture. In direct sunlight the weave shows through more. After weeks of pocket carry, mine still looks fresh with no visible wear. Build and Design Same dimensions as the standard Pro 2. Fits the same in a pocket. Same button placement, same weight. If you've held any kit in the OXVA range, the DNA version feels familiar in hand. The screen is the same 0.56 inch colour display. Shows wattage, coil resistance, battery percentage, and current mode. Readable in sunlight. Three clicks for mode cycling, five clicks to lock. Magnetic pod connection holds firm. No rattling, no accidental pops. The airflow slider on the side adjusts from tight MTL to open RDL with clear steps between settings. Related products & ranges OXVA Xlim series OXVA kits & pods OXVA replacement pods More vaping guides OXVA Xlim 2025 full round-up OXVA Xlim SQ Pro 2 review Are OXVA vapes MTL or DTL?

OXVA Xlim SQ Pro 2 Review: Touchscreen Pod Kit Tested
Ready to buy? Browse the OXVA Xlim series and replacement pods. I've been carrying the OXVA Xlim SQ Pro 2 for two weeks alongside my Pro 2 and NeXlim. After testing it through busy workdays and a trip to Spain, it's taken over as my main kit. Not because of the touchscreen gimmick factor. Because the battery lasts longer, the screen makes wattage changes faster, and the core vaping performance holds up against everything else in the Xlim range. This is my honest take after daily use, not first impressions out of the box. Specs at a Glance Spec Detail Battery 1600mAh (33% more than original SQ Pro) Output 5 to 30W Screen 1.09 inch HD touchscreen Charging USB-C Activation Auto-draw Pod Capacity 2ml (TPD compliant) Airflow Adjustable, MTL to RDL Pods Included Xlim V3 top-fill Colours 8 options [THREE_IMAGE_SHORTCODE] [shotcode_multi_image_section_20] Touchscreen: Actually Useful or Just a Gimmick I was sceptical. Every touchscreen pod kit I've tried before has been laggy, confusing, or both. OXVA got this one right. Swipe to adjust wattage. Tap to check resistance. Glance at battery percentage without pressing anything. Zero lag between touch and response. In bright sunlight during my Spain trip, the screen stayed readable without tilting or shading it. After two weeks, I'm using the touchscreen more than I expected. Wattage adjustments are quicker and more precise than button tapping on the Pro 2. You slide your finger and the number changes in real time. Fine-tuning between 14W and 16W on a 0.8 ohm pod takes a second instead of multiple button presses. 64 Theme Combinations You get 64 different combinations of themes, animations, and wallpapers. Swipe through and pick one, or change it daily if you get bored. It's not a selling point on its own, but it's a nice touch that most kits at this price don't bother with. Puff Tracker Built-in puff counter that tracks daily, weekly, and monthly usage. Works like a step counter for vaping. Your data stays on the kit only. OXVA doesn't collect or store anything. I found this more useful than expected. Knowing my daily puff count helped me notice patterns I hadn't thought about before. Not essential, but interesting. Six Built-In Tools Torch, stopwatch, calendar, language settings, date display, and eco mode. I'll be honest: the torch and stopwatch feel like filler. I've got a phone in my other pocket that does both better. Eco mode is the one worth using. It stretches the battery out to roughly 7 days on light use. Battery: 1600mAh This is where the SQ Pro 2 pulls ahead of the standard Xlim Pro 2. At 1600mAh, it's 300mAh bigger. On a 0.8 ohm pod at 14W, I'm getting a full day and evening without charging. On the 0.6 ohm pod at higher wattage, I still make it through a workday. I vape dessert nic salt e-liquids at 10mg and 5mg throughout the day. That's moderate to heavy use. The SQ Pro 2 kept up every single day during testing without needing a lunchtime top-up. My Pro 2 can't say the same. USB-C charging brings it back quickly. Eco mode on top of the 1600mAh battery makes this the longest-lasting Xlim vape kit I've used. Vaping Performance Here's the part that actually matters. Flavour from the SQ Pro 2 is on par with the Pro 2 and NeXlim. Dessert nic salts come through clean with the 0.8 ohm V3 pod at 14W. Every layer of a custard or bakery profile holds up throughout the pod's life. Auto-draw calibration is spot on. Not too sensitive (no pocket firing), not too slow to respond. Draw, and it fires. Consistent from the first puff of the day through to the last. Power holds steady as the battery drains. At 20% battery I'm still getting the same flavour quality as at full charge. That's worth more than any touchscreen feature. Pod Compatibility Every Xlim pod in the range works with the SQ Pro 2. V3 top-fill, V2 side-fill, and EZ pods all fit. You're not locked into one pod type. I've been using EZ pods alongside V3s during testing. The EZ pods have a 3ml capacity (international version) with a snap-top refill that's easier to fill than the V3's silicone bung. If you've got bigger fingers, the EZ refill is noticeably better. Pod Type Resistance Style Wattage V3 0.4 ohm 0.4 ohm RDL 26 to 30W V3 0.6 ohm 0.6 ohm RDL 20 to 25W V3 0.8 ohm 0.8 ohm MTL 12 to 16W V3 1.2 ohm 1.2 ohm MTL 10 to 12W Airflow adjusts from tight MTL to loose RDL via a slider on the side. On the 0.8 ohm pod closed down, the draw is close to a cigarette. Open it up on a 0.6 ohm pod and you get more vapour with a looser inhale. Colours Eight finishes available: Black Carbon Black Leather Brown Leather Frost Marble Gunmetal Wood Blue Shadow Dream Pink Celadon Marble I've been using Black Carbon. It hides fingerprints better than the glossy finishes and matches the square form factor well. Build and Design Square body with rounded edges. 114g, so it's heavier than a standard Xlim but not enough to weigh down a pocket. The edges are smoother than the original SQ Pro, and extended hand time feels comfortable. Compared to the slimmer Pro 2 and Pro 3, the SQ Pro 2 takes up a bit more room. You notice it in a shirt pocket but not in a trouser pocket. Trade-off for the bigger battery and larger screen. SQ Pro 2 vs Xlim Pro 2 This is the comparison most people searching for this kit want to see. SQ Pro 2 Xlim Pro 2 Battery 1600mAh 1300mAh Screen 1.09 inch touchscreen 0.56 inch button-controlled Output 30W 30W Activation Auto-draw Auto-draw Pods Full Xlim range Full Xlim range Airflow Adjustable MTL to RDL Adjustable MTL to RDL Button Fire No No Extras Puff tracker, eco mode, torch, themes Colour themes Battery and screen are the two biggest upgrades. Vaping performance is nearly identical. If your Pro 2 battery gets you through the day and you don't need a touchscreen, there's no urgent reason to swap. If you want more battery life and a quicker way to adjust settings, the SQ Pro 2 is the better kit. Who It's For Heavy daily vapers who need a battery that lasts past 6pm. Anyone who wants quick wattage adjustments without button pressing. Existing OXVA Xlim owners who want an upgrade without buying new pods. If you want a simpler kit with no screen at all, the Xlim Go 2 is the stripped-back option. If you want the Photon chipset and button fire, the Xlim Pro 3 is the newer pick in the range. The Honest Bits Torch and stopwatch are filler. I used the torch once to find a pod I'd dropped behind the sofa. Stopwatch hasn't been touched. OXVA put them in to pad out the feature list, and I'd rather they spent that development time on something else. Puff tracker, eco mode, and touchscreen wattage control are the ones worth having. Those three justify the touchscreen. Everything else is a bonus you'll use once and forget about. Auto-draw only means no button fire option. If you're coming from a Pro 3 where you've got both, you'll miss the button. If you've been on a Pro 2 (also auto-draw only), it won't matter. Related products & ranges OXVA Xlim series OXVA kits & pods OXVA replacement pods More vaping guides OXVA Xlim 2025 full round-up OXVA Xlim Pro 2 DNA review Best e-liquid for OXVA vapes

UK Vaping Market 2025: Size, Statistics and What's Changed
The UK vaping market hit roughly £2.5 billion in 2025, serving around 5.5 million adult vapers. That puts it among the largest e-cigarette markets in Europe. It's also one of the few where vaping has overtaken smoking as a harm reduction tool at a national level. This page pulls together the key numbers from ASH, Statista, and the Smoking Toolkit Study. We run Ecigone, a specialist online vape retailer based in Chesterfield, so we see these trends in our sales data daily. The stats here are sourced from independent research, not our own figures. How Much Is the UK Vaping Industry Worth Statista projects the UK e-cigarette market at around US$4.5 billion by 2029, growing at roughly 1.5% per year from 2025. Technavio puts the growth slightly higher, estimating the market will expand by US$1.47 billion between 2025 and 2029 at a CAGR of 13.6%. In pound terms, the market sits at approximately £2.5 billion in 2025. Growth has been steady since the early 2010s, though the rate has slowed now that disposable-driven expansion is over. For context, e-cigarette sales in the UK reached £1.6 billion in 2020, up from £1.1 billion in 2017. The market has roughly doubled in value over eight years. How Many People Vape in the UK According to the ASH Smokefree GB survey for 2025, around 5.5 million adults in Great Britain currently vape. That's 10.4% of the adult population. This is actually a slight drop from 2024, when the figure was 5.6 million (10.7%). It marks the first decline in vaping prevalence since tracking began in 2012. The market hasn't collapsed - it's levelled off after years of rapid growth. Disposable vapes were already declining before the ban took effect. The demographic split tells you a lot about who vapes and why: 55% are ex-smokers who've quit tobacco completely (around 3 million people) 40% are current smokers who also vape (2.2 million) 5% have never smoked (260,000) The never-smoker figure actually fell from 8% in 2024 to 5% in 2025. Vaping in the UK remains overwhelmingly a smoking-related behaviour, not something non-smokers are picking up in large numbers. Disposable Vapes Market Share The disposable vape market share question comes up a lot in searches, and the numbers depend on what you're measuring. At their peak in 2023, disposables were the main device for about 31% of all adult vapers in the UK. By 2025, that had dropped to roughly 24%. Among 16-24 year olds, the decline was steeper. Disposable use as a primary vape fell from 63% in January 2024 to 35% by January 2025. That data comes from the Smoking Toolkit Study, published in Addiction. The shift happened before the ban even came into force. Once the government announced plans to ban disposables in January 2024, vapers started moving to alternatives. Pod systems doubled their share from 15% to 25% in a single year. Tank systems still hold around 50% of the market overall. In convenience retail specifically, the impact has been sharper. Data from Talysis shows vaping value sales in convenience stores fell 12.7% year-on-year after the ban, with unit sales down 20.8%. Retailers now stock a wider range of refillable vape kits and pod kits to cover both devices and refills. What Devices Are People Using The ASH 2025 data breaks down device preferences clearly: Device Type Market Share Trend Tank systems 50% Down from 77% in 2021, but stable Pod systems 25% Doubled from 15% in 2024 Disposables 24% Down from 31% peak in 2023 The most popular brands vary by device type. For disposables, Elf Bar (38%), Crystal Bar (35%), and Lost Mary (33%) lead. For pod devices, the field is more even - Blu, Elf Bar, Voopoo, and Lost Mary all sit around 14-15%. In the tank market, Aspire (19%), Vaporesso (18%), and Smok (14%) dominate. Many disposable brands have launched prefilled pod kits to capture users moving away from single-use devices. The transition has been faster than most analysts expected. Flavour and Nicotine Trends Fruit flavours now account for over half of all vaping choices. Back in 2016, tobacco was the most popular category at 33%. By 2025, it's dropped to 11%. Flavour 2016 2025 Fruit 22% 51% Menthol/Mint - 20% Tobacco 33% 11% Ice flavours (fruit or menthol with a cooling hit) are used sometimes or always by 41% of vapers. This is especially common in the 18-34 age group. On nicotine strength, 30% of vapers have reduced their level over time. 84% use strengths within the legal TPD limit of 20mg/ml. Nic salts remain the most popular format for pod users, with 10mg gaining ground as vapers step down from the 20mg that disposables normalised. The Disposable Ban - What Actually Happened The UK banned the sale of single-use disposable vapes from 1 June 2025. It was the first country in Europe to implement a full ban. The immediate effect on convenience retail was significant. Disposables had driven regular footfall into corner shops, and that traffic dropped. But the vaping market itself didn't collapse - users moved to reusable alternatives. Pod systems absorbed most of the demand, with prefilled refill pods replicating the grab-and-go experience. Over 2,000 new vape product barcodes were introduced in 2025 as manufacturers rushed to fill the gap. The market restructured rather than contracted. Illegal disposables remain a concern. Around 9 million illicit vapes were seized from UK retailers in 2024. Trading Standards has committed to on-the-spot fines for shops selling banned products. What's Coming Next Two regulatory changes will shape the market through 2026 and beyond. The E-liquid tax of £2.20 per 10ml takes effect in October 2026 (Vaping Products Duty). It applies to all e-liquids, not just nicotine-containing ones. For someone using a refillable kit and buying 10ml bottles, the cost increase is noticeable but not dramatic. For heavy sub-ohm vapers buying shortfills, the tax adds up more quickly. The Tobacco and Vapes Bill gives the government powers to restrict packaging, flavours, and marketing of vapes. Flavour restrictions and plain packaging may arrive by late 2025 or 2026. The full scope hasn't been confirmed, but the direction is clear. Tighter regulation, higher costs, and a market that rewards quality over volume. For vapers, the practical takeaway is that refillable pod kits and nic salt e-liquids offer the best long-term value. The disposable era is over. The market is shifting toward reusable vapes, lower nicotine strengths, and fruit-led flavour profiles. That shift was already happening before the ban forced the issue. Related products & ranges All vape kits Refillable pod kits Refillable vape kits More vaping guides UK illegal vape epidemic UK vaping laws explained When are disposables banned?








