Not Every Weed Vaper Wants A Battery

High Times
Mon, Mar 30
Key Points
  • Vapman and Lotus stand out in the cannabis hardware market by embracing manual, flame-powered vaporization without batteries, screens, or software, offering a slower, more involved user experience.
  • Unlike mainstream devices focused on speed, automation, and convenience, these vaporizers emphasize ritual, requiring users to engage with timing, heat, and technique, appealing to those seeking a personal and deliberate process.
  • Produced and assembled in Italy using high-quality wood and metal, Vapman and Lotus prioritize longevity, repairability, and craftsmanship, contrasting sharply with the disposable, electronic norm in the industry.
  • Their continued appeal highlights a cultural tension in cannabis consumption between fast, efficient tech and traditional, hands-on rituals, illustrating that some consumers value attention and ritual over convenience and automation.

Vapman and Lotus are betting there’s still room for flame, ritual, and manual control in a category dominated by chargers and buttons.

Cannabis hardware has spent years chasing the same promise: less friction, more convenience. Faster heat-up times, tighter temperature control, sleeker interfaces, USB-C charging, app integration, disposable everything.

And yet, a different kind of device has managed to survive that entire wave without adapting to it.

No batteries. No screens. No software updates. Just wood, metal, heat, and the simple fact that the user has to pay attention.

That is part of what makes Vapman and Lotus interesting. Not because they are new, and not because they are trying to out-tech the rest of the category. Quite the opposite. Their relevance comes from the fact that in a market increasingly built around speed and automation, they still ask something of the person using them.

The broader cannabis hardware market has moved toward predictability. Press a button, get a result. Charge the device, dial in a setting, repeat. For a lot of consumers, that is exactly the point. It is easier, cleaner, more consistent, and often more portable. That model won for a reason.

But it also reshaped the relationship between the user and the ritual. What used to involve touch, timing, and familiarity became increasingly abstracted. The device took over more of the experience. In many cases, that was progress. In others, it meant losing some of what made consumption feel personal in the first place.

That is where manual vaporizers still have a pulse.

Vapman dates back to Switzerland, where it was originally developed in the early 2000s by inventor René Balli. Lotus came out of California with a different design philosophy but a similar devotion to flame-powered vaporization. Today, both sit under the Italy-based INHALE umbrella, which says it took over Vapman in 2020 and Lotus in 2022, bringing production and assembly into its own Italian workshop while keeping the core identity of each device intact.

That history matters, but not because legacy alone makes anything valuable. Plenty of old devices deserved to disappear. What matters here is that both products still speak to a niche that electronic vaporizers never fully absorbed.

INHALE’s David Haller put it plainly: these devices “are not meant to compete with electronics — they exist alongside them, for a very different kind of user.” That distinction is useful because it keeps the story honest. This is not about a better gadget arriving to replace the current one. It is about a persistent counter-preference that never went away.

With a manual device, you see the flame. You learn the timing. You develop a feel for the heat. You adjust. You overdo it sometimes. You get better. The process is less automated and more embodied. That is either annoying or appealing, depending on what you want from cannabis in the first place.

Haller says that is exactly the point. “These devices are for people who are looking for a ritual — something that slows them down, calms them, and pulls them into a process rather than a button press.” He added that they are “not for people looking for instant automation or a ‘press and forget’ experience.”

That preference extends beyond aesthetics.

The company says Vapman has been updated over time to become easier to clean, more repairable, and more user-friendly, including the addition of an integrated click temperature indicator. Lotus, by contrast, has been preserved more closely in its core form, with changes focused more on accessories and surrounding hardware than the heating concept itself. In other words, one device evolved, the other was mostly protected. That split suggests restraint, which is rare in a product category usually obsessed with constant iteration.

It also points to something else: longevity as a value, not just a marketing line.

INHALE says all parts are produced and assembled in Italy, using woods such as olive wood and American walnut, finished by hand with natural oil and no synthetic coatings. The company also says parts can be replaced individually through restore kits or spare components, and that the devices are designed to last for years rather than be treated as sealed, disposable hardware. In cannabis, as in consumer tech more broadly, repairability has become unusual enough to stand out.

That does not mean there is some mass rejection of battery-powered devices underway. There isn’t. Convenience still dominates for obvious reasons. Most consumers are not looking to introduce more steps into a process they already want streamlined. Disposable and electronic systems are not going anywhere.

But cultural significance does not always show up as market dominance. Sometimes it shows up as refusal.

The continued appeal of manual vaporizers suggests that one corner of cannabis culture still values a slower, more deliberate relationship with the object itself. Not out of nostalgia for its own sake, but because the friction is part of the experience. The act is not being optimized out of existence. The user remains involved.

You can see versions of that instinct elsewhere in cannabis. In the interest in solventless. In the enduring appeal of glass. In home growing. In the suspicion some consumers still have toward closed systems, disposable hardware, and products designed to feel effortless above all else. Some of that is practical. Some of it is cultural. Some of it is just taste.

Either way, it reflects a tension that runs through the industry right now. Cannabis keeps getting cleaner, quicker, and more efficient. At the same time, parts of the culture still gravitate toward tools and rituals that feel less hidden, less automated, and less generic.

That is what makes devices like Vapman and Lotus worth looking at. Not because they represent the future of vaporization in some sweeping sense. They probably don’t. And not because they are for everyone. They clearly aren’t.

They matter because they reveal that even in a category shaped by speed and standardization, some users are still choosing attention over convenience.

In a USB-C world, some people really did go back to fire.