Short Bio
My name is Kirill Shelest. I’ve been using vaporizers for several years now and tend to lean toward devices that prioritize vapor output and intensity. I prefer setups that deliver dense, heavy hits consistently, especially on wax. Most of what I use in my own time are e-rigs and dab pens. For me, the appeal has always been in getting the most out of a device and understanding how far it can go before performance starts to drop off.
Background
I got into vaporizers through concentrates, starting with simpler dab pens and eventually moving on to more advanced e-rigs and higher-output devices. As I tried more units, I started noticing that many of them felt similar at first but behaved very differently when pushed harder. Some devices can handle higher temps and longer draws without falling apart, while others start to lose consistency or struggle to keep up. That’s what led me to focus more on testing limits, not just how a device performs under normal use, but how it holds up when you really push it. Over time, I’ve tested a wide range of all types of devices in day-to-day use, paying attention to where they peak and where they start to break down.
What He Covers
At TVape, I focus on how much a vaporizer can output at max capacity. When I test a device, I’m pushing it to higher temperatures, longer draws, and repeated sessions to see how stable it stays under pressure. I look at how consistent the vapor output is, whether it can maintain density without sacrificing too much flavor, and how well the components hold up. That’s usually where the real differences show up, not in casual use, but in how the device performs when you expect more from it.