Fill'er Up!



With the bag attached to the filling chamber, it is placed on top of the heating station. The air switch is pressed, and POOF, the bag starts to fill up with a deliscious looking white vapor. A mist, if you will. Sometimes I wish I could just sit in the bag as it fills, then breathe it all in.



And here is the bag, all filled up. The bag is removed from the filling chamber and the mouthpiece is put on. I just can't believe how damn stoner friendly this piece of machinery is!



Now that the bag is filled, I can breathe it in at a leisurely pace. The bag is airtight, so it doesn't waste any of the "smoke". I can even put it down for a few minutes to go to the bathroom, and then return to it and continue where I left off.



Each time you fill the chamber, you can use it for several bags. That was just one of three I could get from how much I put in. Between balloons (a better word for it than bags), the weed should be stirred so that more unhit surface area gets heated. If not stirred, the second and third bags seem mostly clear, where if you stirred they would be thick and white.



After vaporization, the weed actually isn't done with! The stupid stoner would throw it away, seeing it as crap. But no, it's not crap! It still has a lot of THC in it, and makes a really nice pre-work or pre-sleep joint. It gets you stoned, but not that stoned. It's exactly like how a light cigarette is to a regular cigarette.



The only hard part about having a Volcano vaporizor is that you have to clean it regularly so that the pieces don't get all gunky and stop working well. This is really all you need, though: a little tupperwear thing, a tooth brush, and some rubbing alcohol.



After scrubbing all of the pieces with the tooth brush and the rubbing alcohol, the pieces need to soak in the alcohol for about half an hour. This assures that all of the gunk and crap (or at least most of it) comes off.



After soaking, the pieces should dry for a few hours then put back together for more usage. That's pretty much all there is to the Volcano, other than making different sized balloons. Thank god for German engineering.



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