January 05, 2026 10 min read

A dab torch stays safe and lasts years if you keep the flame short and blue, refuel slowly with clean butane, and treat it like a tiny propane grill. Think of this as your dabbing guide to not setting your carpet, couch, or eyebrows on fire.

Look, torches are the one part of dabbing that still feels a little wild. We have precise bangers, recyclers, even smart rigs, but then we are still pointing handheld fire at expensive glass.

So I spent a lot of time in 2024 and early 2025 abusing torches on purpose. Cheap ones from gas stations, mid range Blazers, some chunky kitchen torches, all used with real dab rigs, dab pads, and silicone dab mats. Here is what actually matters if you want your torch to be safe, predictable, and still working next year.

Close up of a butane dab torch next to a dab rig, carb cap, and silicone dab mat on a tidy dab station
Close up of a butane dab torch next to a dab rig, carb cap, and silicone dab mat on a tidy dab station

What makes a dab torch safe in 2025?

Torch safety starts way before you even hit the ignition. It starts with the build, the fuel, and where you use it.

If your torch checks these boxes, you are already ahead of most people:

  • Stable base that does not wobble
  • Visible safety lock and adjustable flame control
  • Metal nozzle, not soft plastic around the tip
  • Uses refined butane, not random lighter fluid
  • No leaks, hissing, or fuel smell when “off”
Important: If you ever hear a faint hiss while your torch is “off,” that is a hard stop. That is a leak. Do not “just watch it.” Empty it outside and retire it.

Size and style actually matter

Small pocket torches are fine for travel or micro rigs, but they get sketchy fast on bigger setups. More flame time means more heat soaking into the body.

For daily dabbing at home, I like a mid size table torch with a wide base. Think Blazer Big Shot, Newport Zero, or similar 40 to 80 dollar units. They stay upright, they do not get top heavy, and the controls are usually more precise.

Budget Option (under 25 dollars)

  • Type: Pocket torch
  • Fuel: Butane
  • Best for: Travel rigs, quick hits, backup torch
  • Risk: Easier to tip, smaller tank, more refills

Daily Driver Option (40 to 80 dollars)

  • Type: Table torch
  • Fuel: Triple refined butane
  • Best for: Daily use with full size dab rig or bong
  • Benefit: Stable base, better flame control, longer life

Torch vs e rig vs vaporizer

In 2025, a lot of dabbers are bouncing between a classic torch and banger setup, an e rig like Puffco Proxy, and sometimes a portable vaporizer.

Here is where a torch still wins:

  • Thick quartz or opaque bottom bangers that need a deep heat soak
  • Cold start techniques where you really want to tune the timing
  • Big sessions at a dab station with multiple rigs, pads, and tools

And here is where a torch loses:

  • Tiny apartments with zero ventilation
  • People who light everything like a blunt and forget to turn things off
  • Anyone who regularly dabbed “just a bit too much” and falls asleep with glass in hand

If you are in that last group, a torchless setup is probably smarter for you. Real talk.


How does this dabbing guide keep your torch safe?

This is not just “do not point fire at your face.” You already know that part.

This dabbing guide is about three things that actually change how your torch behaves:

1. Flame control

2. Refueling technique

3. Long term maintenance

Flame, fuel, and follow through. If you dial in those three, your torch will feel way less random and way less cursed.

Note: You do not need a lab degree. You just need to stop treating the torch like a disposable lighter and start treating it like a tiny stove.

How should you control your torch flame?

This is where most people go wrong. They crank the knob until the torch screams, then complain their banger keeps chazzing.

What does a good dab flame look like?

Picture a short, tight, blue cone. No crazy noise. No giant yellow dragon tongue.

That inner blue cone should be about:

  • 1 to 1.5 inches for small bangers
  • 1.5 to 2 inches for thick bottom quartz or big slurpers

If the flame is long, loud, and has yellow at the tip, you are wasting fuel and cooking the air, not the nail.

Pro Tip: The hottest part of the flame is the tip of the inner blue cone. That is the part you want grazing the bottom of your banger, not blowing past it into your wall.

Distance and angle: where people cook their glass

Most folks hold the torch too close. Half an inch away, directly blasting the same spot. That is how you get thermal shock and micro fractures in your expensive glass.

Use this instead:

  • Keep the nozzle 1.5 to 3 inches away from the banger
  • Sweep the flame slowly around the bottom and sides
  • Angle the flame slightly past the banger so the hottest zone brushes it, not stabs it

If you ever see your banger glowing bright orange, you went too far. Especially with clear quartz. Your quartz is screaming.

Matching flame to rig size

Big recycler or heavy 5 millimeter thick banger on a wide base dab rig? You can run a hotter, slightly longer flame, and you will still be fine.

Tiny micro rig or thin import banger on a skinny neck? Dial the flame down. Give it more time. Otherwise you are asking that glass to fail.


How do you refuel a dab torch the right way?

Refueling is where torches live or die. Do it wrong and you get sputtering flames, random shut offs, or fuel leaks.

So here is a proper refuel, step by step.

Step 1: Pick the right butane

Use at least triple refined butane from a real brand. Think:

  • Newport
  • Colibri
  • Vector
  • Blazer

Usually 6 to 15 dollars a can in 2025, depending on brand and region.

Cheap butane has more impurities. Those gums and oils clog your torch internals over time. I have literally killed a torch in six months this way on purpose, just to see.

Warning: Do not use lighter fluid, propane, or whatever random can is in your garage. Butane only, and only the stuff made for torches or high end lighters.

Step 2: Work somewhere safe and soft

Refill over a dab pad, oil slick pad, or silicone dab mat. Something soft that will catch the torch or the butane can if it slips. Hard counters and metal sinks are a chipped nozzle waiting to happen.

And ventilate. A window open, fan on low, not in a tiny bathroom with the door closed.

Step 3: Bleed the torch first

This is the step most people skip. Old fuel plus trapped air bubbles are why your torch sputters.

Here is how to bleed it:

1. Make sure the flame control is turned all the way down and the torch is off

2. Use a small tool, like the non sharp end of a dab tool, to press the fuel valve on the bottom

3. Hold it upside down and gently press until no more gas or air hisses out

You are basically resetting the tank. Fresh start.

Step 4: Actually refuel

1. Turn the torch upside down

2. Align the butane nozzle with the fill valve

3. Press straight in and hold for 5 to 10 seconds

4. Stop, let it rest for 10 seconds

5. Repeat once or twice until you see a tiny bit of butane spitting out during fill

That little spit is your sign that the tank is full. Anything more is just waste.

Pro Tip: After refilling, let the torch sit for at least 3 to 5 minutes before lighting. The internal pressure needs to stabilize, and any surface butane needs to evaporate.

How do you keep a torch running for years?

Longevity is where I see the biggest gap between how people treat rigs versus torches. Everyone babies their 300 dollar glass piece. The torch gets tossed in a drawer like a screwdriver.

You want your torch to last from this year to 2027 and beyond? Do these small things.

Keep it clean, at least a little

Residue builds up everywhere during dabs. On the nozzle, ignition button, and base. Especially if your dab station lives near a sticky concentrate pad or wax pad.

Quick routine after a session:

  • Wipe the body and base with an alcohol wipe or microfiber cloth
  • Use a cotton swab with a bit of ISO to clean around the nozzle, not inside it
  • Dry it fully before the next use
Important: Do not pour alcohol into the nozzle or fuel valve. You are cleaning surfaces, not “flushing” anything.

Protect it from heat soak

Here is a subtle one. If you keep your torch right next to a hot banger on a tiny dab tray, it slowly gets heat soaked. Over months, that can warp internals and mess with seals.

Better habit:

  • Torch on one side of your dab pad
  • Rig and banger toward the middle
  • Carb cap, dab tool, and Q tips on the other side

Think of your pad or silicone dab mat as zones. Fire, glass, tools. Not all piled together in one hot mess.

Use the lock and cap like they matter

If your torch has a safety lock, use it every single time between dabs. Your future self will thank you the day it falls over and does not light itself on your couch.

Some torches include a tip cover or cap. It is not just for show. Pop it on once the torch is fully cooled. That helps keep dust and gunk out of the nozzle and ignition area.


What torch mistakes are people still making?

I still see the same five mistakes in 2025 that I saw ten years ago. The tech improved. The habits, not so much.

Mistake 1: Lighting near flammables

Carpet. Curtains. Open alcohol bottles. Even that paper towel you just soaked in ISO and left on the dab tray.

Treat your torch area like a stove:

  • No loose paper
  • No cloths near the flame path
  • No open solvents within the ignition zone

Mistake 2: Torching dirty bangers forever

People try to “clean” a black, crusted banger with more heat. So they crank the torch, go longer, and bake on even more carbon.

Use a real cleaning routine instead:

  • Q tip after every dab while the banger is warm, not hot
  • Soak in ISO occasionally
  • Gentle scrub, not torch punishment

Your torch and your quartz both live longer this way.

Mistake 3: Treating pocket torches like industrial tools

Those 10 dollar gas station torches are built for quick lights, not 45 second heat soaks of thick glass. Long burns overheat the body and kill the piezo ignition.

If you find yourself clicking more than you are dabbing, upgrade. Your sanity is worth the 40 to 60 bucks.

Mistake 4: Storing torches on their side

If you toss a full torch sideways in a drawer under your bong or pipe collection, you get a few issues:

  • Valves stay bathed in liquid fuel
  • More risk of leaks
  • If it gets bumped, ignition parts can bend

Store torches upright, ideally on your dab station or on a dedicated shelf near your dab pad or oil slick pad.

Mistake 5: Ignoring “weird smells”

If you ever smell raw gas and you are not actively bleeding or refueling, something is wrong. That smell is not “normal torch scent.”

If you cannot find the source quickly, take it outside, bleed the remaining fuel, and retire it. New torches are cheaper than new apartments.


How should you store your torch with your rig setup?

This is the part that feels small until you actually reorganize your dab space. Then everything clicks.

Overhead shot of a tidy dab station with dab rig, dab pad, torch, tools, and Q tips all in defined zones
Overhead shot of a tidy dab station with dab rig, dab pad, torch, tools, and Q tips all in defined zones

Build a little “torch lane”

On a standard dab station or tray, I like this layout:

  • Front middle: dab rig or bong
  • Under everything: silicone dab mat or thick dab pad to catch drips and protect glass
  • Right side: torch with a clear path away from anything flammable
  • Left side: carb cap, dab tool, Q tips, cotton swabs, concentrates on a small concentrate pad

That way your torch hand is always moving away from tools and solvents. Less chaos, less chance of knocking something over.

Separate your fuel

Keep butane cans somewhere else. Not on the same dab tray, not right behind the torch.

A cool, shaded cabinet or drawer is better. High up if you live with kids or curious roommates. And obviously, do not store fuel near stoves, heaters, or any open flame.

Pro Tip: Label your “good” butane and your “random camp fuel.” Do not mix them up on a sleepy late night sesh.

Where does torch safety fit in your overall dabbing setup?

Torch safety is not glamorous. People would rather talk about the new recycler, the fancy glass, or the latest vaporizer with 12 heat profiles. I get it.

But the torch is still the heart of a classic setup. It decides how your quartz treats your terps. It decides whether your dab rig, your silicone dab mat, and your floor stay clean, or end up covered in scorched reclaim and ash.

If you follow this dabbing guide and dial in flame control, refueling, and basic maintenance, a decent torch can easily run for several years. You will taste more of your concentrates, crack fewer bangers, and cut down on those “uh oh, is that leaking?” moments.

And honestly, there is something satisfying about having a clean, dialed in torch sitting next to a tidy dab pad and glass that is not chazzed to hell. It feels intentional. Like you actually meant to be good at this.

So next time you set up your rig, take an extra five minutes for the torch. Check the flame, bleed and refill with good fuel, wipe it down, and park it upright in its own little lane. Tiny effort, huge return.


Subscribe