That’s about everything nice to say about it that I can think of. If there were no other batteries in its range, the CCELL Rizo would start looking better. The airflow is just average but produces vapor. The extreme simplicity flattens the learning curve. It looks nice enough and its micro-size makes it compact. The CCELL Rizo Does What It’s Intended To, I Guess ![]() So by comparison, in my experience the CCELL Rizo is just under-performing, especially at prices I’ve seen, $39.95 at VPM and at VapeFuse, and as low as “from $29.99” at Hamilton Devices. Perhaps they did lots of focus market polling and this is the design that popped out of their algorithms, but I still see what batteries other users like and they seem to prefer what I prefer. Now add to that the brand which I consider the King of Compact, Doteco, with the MGear4 and TIK10, both with an MSRP under $20 and actually managed to pack in 4 temperature settings, a button, a flat side to set it down, and more.ĬCELL staff writes to inform me that in fact, the Silo and Palm are their old models and the Rizo is supposed to be their improvement. Both of those are palm-sized cartridge batteries with more features and also go for a budget price. Just in the CCELL line alone, we have the Silo and the Palm. There Are Just So Many Batteries Out There Which, if your cartridges get clogged up, becomes harder to activate. With no button to fire up the heating element, you’re stuck with draw-on-demand. What is the purpose of this? “Oh, I can’t tell if I’m inhaling – wait, my lips are vibrating! Aha, so I AM inhaling!” Hope your lips aren’t ticklish, because they’re getting buzzed with every puff. The haptic feedback kicks on every time you draw.
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