
Look, there's a lot of basic "how to dab" content out there. This isn't that. This is for people who've already taken their first dab, know what a banger is, and want to actually understand what's happening when they're consuming concentrates. We're going deep on cold-start vs hot-start dabbing, flavor stacking technique, and home rosin pressing. If any of that sounds like what you've been looking for, keep reading.
Cold-start dabbing is a technique where you load your concentrate into a cool or room-temperature banger before applying heat, rather than heating the banger first and then dropping in the concentrate. The result is dramatically better flavor, lower temperatures by default, and a lot less wasted material.
I switched to cold-start about three years ago and honestly I can't go back. The terp flavor on a cold-start dab is on another level compared to what I was getting from torching and waiting.
Here's the step-by-step, no fluff:
The whole process takes about 15-20 seconds of heat application depending on banger thickness. A standard 4mm quartz banger will reach working temperature faster than a 6mm thermal banger.
Hot-start (or traditional) dabbing means heating your banger to high temp first, then waiting for it to cool to the ideal dab temperature before dropping in your concentrate. Hot-start is still the preferred method for many seasoned dabbers, and honestly, it's not going anywhere.
The reason some people prefer hot-start: you have more control over your exact surface temperature. If you're using an infrared thermometer or a temp-reading device, you can nail a precise number before every single dab.
Dab temperature is the single biggest variable in the quality of your sesh, and most people run too hot.
For hot-start dabbing, based on years of testing and community-shared data, here are the working ranges:
Low Temp Dabs (350-450°F)
Mid Temp Dabs (450-550°F)
High Temp Dabs (550-700°F)
For a complete breakdown by concentrate type, the Best Dab Temperatures for Every Concentrate guide goes much deeper on this.

Flavor stacking is a technique for layering multiple concentrates in a single dab session to create a more complex terpene profile. The concept comes from the idea that different concentrates have different dominant terpenes, and combining them can result in a hit that's richer and more interesting than any single product alone.
It's a bit like cooking. You wouldn't season a dish with only salt.
The basic approach:
Start with a base concentrate, something with a well-rounded profile. Live resin works well, so does a quality rosin. Load a moderate amount into your banger.
Then add a small "accent" layer on top. This is usually something more terpene-forward, like a live resin sauce or a high-terp cold cure rosin. You want maybe 20-30% of the total dab to be the accent.
The key is dab temperature. You need to stay in the 380-480°F range for flavor stacking to work. Too hot and you're just burning everything simultaneously with no nuance.
Cold-start method is much better suited to flavor stacking than hot-start. The gradual temperature rise lets each layer express at slightly different points in the dab.
A few combinations I've personally used that work well:
The more you experiment, the more you develop an instinct for what pairs well. Think of it as learning your terpene palate.
Home rosin pressing is the process of using heat and pressure to extract solventless concentrate directly from cannabis flower, hash, or kief. No chemicals, no expensive lab equipment in theory. Just heat, pressure, and parchment paper.
A rosin press is a device that applies controlled heat and pressure to cannabis material, causing trichomes to rupture and release resin that gets collected on parchment paper. Home presses have gotten surprisingly affordable in 2026, with entry-level options running $150-400 and serious semi-pro plates starting around $700-1200.

The short list:
This is where most beginners go wrong. Too hot and you degrade terpenes before they make it to your parchment. Too much pressure too fast and you get chlorophyll and plant material in your rosin.
Recommended starting points, based on material type:
Flower Rosin
Bubble Hash Rosin
Kief Rosin
Flower rosin is the most accessible but the least efficient. If you're serious about pressing your own, investing in good bubble hash as starting material is worth it for both yield and final product quality.
For storage after pressing, glass jars are the gold standard for keeping your rosin fresh and flavorful. Silicone containers work too, especially for travel, but glass preserves terpenes better over longer periods.
The best setup for advanced dabbing in 2026 centers around quality quartz bangers, proper carb caps, a reliable heat source, and a clean workspace.
For cold-start and flavor stacking specifically, your banger choice matters more than most people realize.
A standard flat-top quartz banger handles most techniques well. But if you're flavor stacking or doing cold-starts regularly, a few options are worth knowing:
Carb caps are non-negotiable for any of these techniques. A spinning or directional carb cap makes a real difference for terp slurpers and flavor stacking, since you can direct airflow across the concentrate to vaporize it evenly.
About the Author
Kai Andersen has been in the dabbing community for over 5 years, testing everything from budget rigs to high-end setups. They write for Oil Slick Pad to help fellow enthusiasts make better gear choices.