If you’re a long-term vaper, there’s a good chance that you have a very specific idea of what you want your vaping experience to be like.
You probably have a favorite vape tank, and you’ve tested that tank enough to know that it performs best within a very specific wattage range. T
here’s also a good chance that, more than anything else, you want a vaping setup that gives you the biggest possible clouds and the boldest possible flavors.
If those things are true, a vape mod is the only type of vaping device that makes sense for you.
You want a device with batteries that last all day, and you want something that can deliver massive power without breaking a sweat.
Only a vape mod can do those things.
What Are the Drawbacks of Vape Mods?
A vape mod usually isn’t the ideal device to choose if you’re new to vaping. That’s partially because the included tank won’t be compatible with the mouth-to-lung inhaling style you’ll almost certainly want to use.
A vape mod always includes a tank designed for direct-to-lung inhaling, and that means it’ll work best with a low-nicotine e-liquid. It’ll give you huge clouds,
but it won’t give you the throat hit that you want when you’re trying to switch to vaping. In addition, a vape mod doesn’t have the easy simplicity of a device like a pod system.
Setting up a vape mod requires learning how to navigate a complicated menu system – and although experienced vapers often appreciate that level of complexity, new vapers usually don’t.
Vape Pods are usually a bit larger than pod systems. The larger size allows a vape pen to hold a higher-capacity battery cell,
and that means a vape pen typically produces bigger clouds and lasts longer on a battery charge than a pod system. That can potentially make a vape pen a better choice for you than a pod system if you’re a new vaper with very high nicotine needs. With the new generation of higher-performance pod mods, though, the difference in capabilities between pod systems and vape pens isn’t as distinct as it once was.