March 24, 2026 15 min read

Spring in March has a funny way of exposing old messes. The sticky ring on the coffee table. The mystery smudge on the dab station. And, if you’ve been dabbing for a while, that slow realization that half your concentrate budget is quietly sliding into your rig as reclaim.

A reclaim catcher is one of those accessories that feels optional, right up until you run without one for a week. Then you notice everything.

Table of contents

  • What is a reclaim catcher?
  • Dry reclaim catcher vs water reclaim catcher: which one fits your rig?
  • How do you choose the right reclaim catcher size and angle?
  • How do you install a reclaim catcher without stressing your glass?
  • How do you prevent reclaim clogs and nasty airflow?
  • How do you clean a reclaim catcher safely?
  • When is reclaim worth saving, and when should you toss it?
  • What’s the best reclaim setup for beginners in 2026?
Dabbing - A clean dab rig with a reclaim catcher installed between the banger and joint, sitting on a silicone mat with a ...
A clean dab rig with a reclaim catcher installed between the banger and joint, sitting on a silicone mat with a dab tool and carb cap nearby

Reclaim catchers for dabbing: what they do and why they matter

A reclaim catcher is a small glass add-on that intercepts condensed concentrate vapor before it turns into gunk inside your rig. It keeps your main piece cleaner, your pull more consistent, and your cleaning schedule less annoying.

The surprising part is what it doesn’t do. It won’t magically fix harsh hits if your dab temperature is too high, and it won’t save terps that you already cooked off. But it changes the math of ownership, especially if your daily driver rig has tight percs that love trapping sludge.

I started taking reclaim catchers seriously after a week of “just one quick dab” turning into a full teardown. You know the moment, you tip the rig, light hits the chamber, and it looks like a science fair project. A catcher doesn’t make you cleaner as a person. It just gives the mess somewhere smarter to land.

If you’ve been building a proper setup, this is where the little stuff starts to matter. A stable work surface (silicone dab pads are my non-negotiable), a place to set hot tools, and a catcher that keeps the rig from turning into a tar pit.


What is a reclaim catcher?

A reclaim catcher is a glass (sometimes silicone) attachment that sits between your rig’s joint and your quartz banger to collect reclaim, the condensed oils that cool down and drip out of your vapor path.

Reclaim is leftover concentrate that re-solidifies after you inhale. It’s darker, more oxidized, and usually lower in terp content than the dab you started with. Still useful sometimes. Also sometimes gross. We’ll get there.

Most reclaim catchers look like a mini chamber with two joints:

  • One joint plugs into your rig (commonly 10 mm or 14 mm, male)
  • The other joint accepts your banger (male or female depending on your setup)

Some have a removable silicone plug. Some have a little jar-style reservoir. Some use water. Some stay dry.

And yes, you can find “reclaim catchers” marketed for pipes or bongs too. Same principle. Different airflow. A bong catcher usually prioritizes splash control and diffusion, while a rig catcher prioritizes sticky oil management.

Note: A drop-down adapter is not the same thing as a reclaim catcher. A drop-down is a joint offset that helps with clearance and heat distance, while a reclaim catcher is designed to trap condensed oils in a chamber.

Dry reclaim catcher vs water reclaim catcher: which one fits your rig?

Dry reclaim catchers are usually better for saving usable reclaim, while water reclaim catchers are usually better for keeping your rig extra clean at the cost of turning reclaim into swamp soup.

That’s the real trade. Cleanliness versus salvage.

Dry reclaim catchers (no water)

A dry reclaim catcher is a catcher with an empty chamber that lets reclaim condense and drip into a collection area.

Why I like them:

  • Reclaim is easier to harvest and store
  • Less smell than water catchers (stale reclaim water has a personality)
  • Less maintenance during the week
  • Less airflow restriction, in my experience, if you buy a decent one

Downsides:

  • If you run hot or take giant hits, the chamber can still gunk up fast
  • Some designs clog at the narrow bend
  • You’ll see more reclaim buildup in the catcher itself, which is the point, but it can freak people out

Water reclaim catchers (tiny bubbler chamber)

A water reclaim catcher is a catcher with a small water chamber that forces vapor through water before it continues into the rig.

Why people swear by them:

  • Keeps the main rig shockingly clean
  • Cools and humidifies the pull a bit, which some folks love
  • Helps trap fine particles and oil mist

Downsides that nobody brags about:

  • The reclaim is harder to “save” because it’s mixed with water and whatever else is in there
  • You have to change that water often, like daily if you’re heavy
  • If you forget it for a few days, it smells like a damp basement that also dabs

Dry vs water: quick comparison you can actually use

Dry vs water: dry offers easier reclaim collection and simpler weekly cleaning, while water provides stronger rig cleanliness and smoother pulls but creates messy reclaim water that’s rarely worth saving.

If your goal is reclaim management and re-use, go dry. If your goal is a clean rig and you don’t care about reclaim, water can be great. Just be honest about your habits.

Dabbing - Side-by-side comparison photo, dry reclaim catcher with amber reclaim vs water catcher with tinted water and res...
Side-by-side comparison photo, dry reclaim catcher with amber reclaim vs water catcher with tinted water and residue line

How do you choose the right reclaim catcher size and angle?

Choose a reclaim catcher by matching joint size (10 mm, 14 mm, 18 mm), joint gender (male or female), and joint angle (90° or 45°) to your rig and banger, then prioritize airflow and stability over “cool features.”

This is the part where people guess, order the wrong angle, and then blame the universe. I’ve done it. Twice.

Step 1: Match joint size

Most dab rigs are 10 mm or 14 mm. 18 mm exists, but it’s less common in newer compact rigs.

  • 10 mm: common on mini rigs and small recyclers
  • 14 mm: the most common all-around size
  • 18 mm: bigger rigs, bigger airflow, less common for newer “small footprint” rigs

If you don’t know, measure. A cheap digital caliper helps, but even comparing to a known 14 mm banger works.

Step 2: Match joint gender

Joint gender is just who plugs into who.

  • Male joint goes into a female joint
  • Female joint receives a male joint

A lot of rigs have female joints. A lot of bangers are male. So a common reclaim catcher is male (to rig) plus female (to accept banger). But don’t assume.

Step 3: Pick the angle (90° vs 45°)

  • 90° is typical for straight up-and-down banger setups, like many modern rigs.
  • 45° is common on older rigs, some recycler styles, and certain angled joints.

Angle mismatch is brutal. A 45° catcher on a 90° rig makes your banger sit weird, and weird turns into stress cracks.

Step 4: Consider clearance and center of gravity

A reclaim catcher adds height and. If your rig is short and your banger is heavy, the whole thing can feel top-heavy.

If you dab on a desk, get serious about stability:

  • A wider base rig
  • A smaller catcher
  • Or both

This is also where a silicone mat earns its keep. Oil Slick Pad is a cannabis accessories brand built around dab pads and silicone mats, and I’m biased because I’ve watched a rig slide on bare wood. Once. Never again.

Step 5: Decide what “good airflow” means to you

A catcher with a narrow internal tube can feel like sipping a milkshake through a coffee stirrer once it starts collecting. Wide, simple pathways stay usable longer.

Based on our testing at Oil Slick Pad (and by “testing,” I mean months of daily use plus friends who hit rigs like they’re trying to inhale the moon), simple dry catchers clog less often than complex percolated ones.

Price reality in 2026

In March 2026, most decent reclaim catchers sit in the $15 to $60 range, depending on glass thickness, joint quality, and whether it includes extras like a plug.

If you see a $10 catcher with sketchy joints, don’t act surprised when it wobbles like a baby deer.

Structured picks by budget (no hype, just fit)

Budget Option ($15-25)

  • Material: Borosilicate glass
  • Best for: Casual users who want less rig cleaning
  • Look for: Simple dry chamber, wide pathway, snug joint grind

Midrange Option ($25-40)

  • Material: Thicker borosilicate, sometimes with a removable plug
  • Best for: Daily drivers, heavier use
  • Look for: Stable shape, easy access for cleaning, no tiny percs

Premium Option ($40-60)

  • Material: Thick borosilicate, better joint fit consistency
  • Best for: Heavy users who hate maintenance
  • Look for: Wide internal bore, reinforced joints, balanced weight distribution

How do you install a reclaim catcher without stressing your glass?

Install a reclaim catcher by supporting the rig joint with one hand, inserting the catcher with a gentle twist (no force), and ensuring the banger sits level before you heat anything.

Glass breaks from more than impact. Catchers add. So slow down.

Step by step dabbing accessory install (the safe way)

  1. Set your rig on a flat surface, ideally on a silicone dab pad so it won’t slide.
  1. Remove your banger and wipe the rig joint dry.
  1. Hold the rig by the joint area with one hand. Not by the neck. Not by the base only.
  1. Insert the reclaim catcher with a gentle twist. If it squeaks or grinds, stop and reseat.
  1. Insert your quartz banger into the catcher. Check that it sits level.
  1. Add your carb cap nearby and make sure you have a safe place for hot glass.
Warning: Don’t “jam” a joint that doesn’t fit. A too-tight joint can seize, and pulling it apart later is how people snap joints clean off.

A quick word on keck clips

Keck clips (those little plastic joint clamps) are useful, especially with catchers, but don’t treat them like a substitute for proper fit. If a catcher is wobbling even with a clip, it’s not a clip problem.

Why install matters for flavor and safety

A level banger heats evenly. An off-angle banger gets hot spots, and hot spots change how your concentrate behaves.

If you’re trying to dial in dab temperature, this matters more than people admit. If you want a deeper dive, the “Best Dab Temperatures for Every Concentrate” topic is its own rabbit hole, but the short version is most flavor-focused dabs live between 350-450°F, and “why is this harsh” usually starts above that.


How do you prevent reclaim clogs and nasty airflow?

You prevent reclaim clogs by keeping dab temperatures reasonable, taking smaller loads, cleaning the catcher on a schedule, and avoiding designs with tight internal bends.

Most clogs are predictable. That’s the annoying part.

The biggest clog causes I see

  • Too-hot dabs (thin vapor turns into sticky mist everywhere)
  • Oversized globs that boil and spit
  • Pulling too hard, which drags oil mist into places it shouldn’t go
  • Catchers with narrow internal pathways
  • Letting it go “one more day” for a week

And yes, cold start dabbing can help. A cold start dab is a technique where you load concentrate into a cool banger and heat gradually until it starts to melt and vaporize. It tends to reduce scorching and can cut down on that burnt, sticky blow-by that makes reclaim uglier. If you’re still learning how to dab, cold starts are the most forgiving “beginner guide dabbing” move I know.

A simple maintenance rhythm that works

Here’s my real-life schedule for a daily driver:

  • Daily: quick wipe of the banger with a q-tip or glob mop after each dab
  • Every 2 to 4 days: rinse or quick ISO swish of the reclaim catcher if airflow starts to change
  • Weekly: full soak and rinse, then dry completely

If you want an easy way to dabbing without constant deep cleaning, that schedule is the difference between “pleasant hobby” and “why does my rig hate me.”

Pro Tip: Put a small glass jar on your station just for “dirty tools.” Dab tools, tweezers, even a carb cap if it got sticky. A dedicated jar keeps your silicone mat from becoming the catch-all crime scene.

Design choices that clog less

In my experience:

  • Straight-through dry catchers clog slower than percolated micro-catchers
  • Wider bores stay usable longer
  • Removable plugs are nice if you actually use them, otherwise they’re just another thing to lose

And if you’re using a nectar collector instead of a rig sometimes, reclaim management changes. Nectar collectors can build reclaim in the body fast, especially if you’re sipping on low temp hits. Same logic applies, but cleaning is usually more frequent because the pathways are narrower.

Dabbing - Close-up of a partially clogged reclaim catcher with narrowed airflow path, next to a clean one and a cotton swab
Close-up of a partially clogged reclaim catcher with narrowed airflow path, next to a clean one and a cotton swab

How do you clean a reclaim catcher safely?

Clean a reclaim catcher safely by using 91-99% isopropyl alcohol (ISO) or warm soapy water, never applying open flame near alcohol, and fully drying the catcher before reusing it.

If you’ve ever watched someone “speed clean” with a torch nearby, you’ve seen my soul leave my body. ISO vapors are no joke.

The basic ISO soak method (my default)

This is the “cleaning guide dabbing” routine I use most weeks.

  1. Remove the catcher from the rig and separate it from the banger.
  1. Dump any loose reclaim into a trash container or collection container, depending on your plan.
  1. Rinse with warm water for 10 to 20 seconds to loosen surface gunk.
  1. Submerge in 91-99% ISO for 20 to 60 minutes.
  1. Swish, then rinse thoroughly with warm water.
  1. Air dry completely, at least a couple hours, overnight if you can.

If you want to speed it up, you can put the catcher in a sealed bag with ISO and gently agitate it. Just don’t treat it like a maraca.

Warning: Never microwave ISO. Never boil ISO. Never torch glass that has ISO on it. If you smell alcohol, you’re still in the danger zone.

Salt or no salt?

Salt is great for scrubbing big chambers, but some reclaim catchers have internal corners where salt can lodge. If you use salt, use coarse salt, rinse thoroughly, and inspect.

Hot water and dish soap (the “I don’t care about reclaim” method)

If you’re not saving reclaim, warm water plus dish soap works surprisingly well for light buildup. It won’t cut through heavy reclaim like ISO, but it’s a decent mid-week reset.

How to “harvest” reclaim without making it weird

If you’re saving reclaim from a dry catcher:

  • Warm the catcher slightly with hot tap water on the outside, not a torch.
  • Move it into a small glass jar for storage.

Parchment paper is a tool here, same as it is for rosin pressing. A little square on the counter saves you from scraping directly on glass like a caveman.

And keep your reclaim container labeled. Nobody wants the “is this reclaim or live resin” guessing game.

Important: Reclaim is decarbed to some extent, but not in a controlled way. Treat it like a different product than your fresh concentrate, and dose accordingly.

Safe surfaces matter

Cleaning turns into a sticky slip-and-slide fast. I clean on a silicone mat, always. Oil Slick Pad focuses on concentrate accessories like silicone dab pads, and it’s the one “boring” accessory that keeps everything else from getting wrecked.


When is reclaim worth saving, and when should you toss it?

Reclaim is worth saving if it’s from a clean, dry setup and you plan to use it for edibles or low-stakes sessions, and it’s not worth saving if it’s contaminated, waterlogged, or smells off.

This is where the community gets divided. One person treats reclaim like treasure. Another treats it like the dab version of lint.

Here’s my stance. Reclaim is a tool, not a prize.

Times reclaim is worth saving

  • You run a dry catcher and keep it reasonably clean
  • You want edible-ready material without extra decarb steps
  • You’re making capsules, mixing into a little coconut oil, or adding to a recipe where flavor doesn’t matter
  • You’re between pickups and want a safety net

Reclaim is often higher in CBN and feels “sleepier” to some folks. That’s not a lab guarantee, it’s just a consistent vibe I’ve noticed personally after years of saving small batches.

Times reclaim isn’t worth saving

  • It came from a water catcher (now it’s diluted and grim)
  • You see dust, plant debris, or anything questionable
  • It tastes like burnt popcorn and regret
  • It’s been sitting in a warm car, open container, or unsealed silicone for weeks

Also, if your rig water hygiene is questionable, don’t eat your reclaim. If you wouldn’t drink the rig water (please don’t), don’t ingest the byproducts of it.

Reclaim for vaping again?

You can, but it’s usually harsh and flat. If your goal is flavor, reclaim isn’t your friend.

If your goal is “I want something that works,” reclaim can do the job, especially in a vaporizer designed for concentrates where you can control heat precisely. Just expect more residue and more cleaning.

Reclaim and health reality

Combusted contaminants are a different world, but even with concentrates, reclaim can carry degraded compounds and whatever was in your vapor path. I’m not here to preach. I’m here to say this plainly: clean gear in equals cleaner reclaim out.

If you’re looking for “what is the best dabbing” experience, reclaim isn’t the answer. It’s the backup plan.

Dabbing - A small glass jar labeled “reclaim” next to parchment paper squares, a dab tool, and a clean quartz banger
A small glass jar labeled “reclaim” next to parchment paper squares, a dab tool, and a clean quartz banger

What’s the best reclaim setup for beginners in 2026?

The best reclaim setup for beginners in 2026 is a simple dry reclaim catcher that matches your joint (usually 14 mm, 90°), paired with a stable station, basic ISO cleaning supplies, and a sane temperature routine.

Beginners don’t need a complicated mini-perc catcher with three chambers. Beginners need fewer variables.

A beginner-friendly reclaim station (what I’d actually set up)

  • A small to medium dab rig with a stable base
  • A 14 mm, 90° dry reclaim catcher with a wide pathway
  • A quartz banger that isn’t paper-thin
  • A carb cap that seals well (bubble cap or directional cap both work)
  • A couple dab tools, including one you don’t mind getting messy
  • ISO 91-99% + cotton swabs
  • A silicone mat to keep your gear from sliding and to protect the table
  • A glass jar for storing reclaim or fresh concentrates separately

That setup also plays nicely with the other “session tools” people are buying right now. A grinder for flower nights, a pipe or bong for passing around, a vaporizer for discreet hits. Reclaim management sits in the background, but it keeps your rig from becoming the high-maintenance friend who always needs something.

How reclaim management connects to temperature and technique

If you’re learning how to dab, the technique you choose changes the reclaim you collect.

  • Low temp dabs (around 350-450°F) usually taste better and can produce lighter reclaim, but you may get more leftover puddle in the banger.
  • High temp dabs (500°F and up) can create darker reclaim and more “vapor path gunk” because you’re pushing hotter vapor through cooler glass.

Low temp vs high temp dabs deserves its own deep dive, and it has a lot to do with how often your catcher clogs. Same with cold starts. Same with how you take your first dab safely, like not leaning over the banger and treating a torch like a toy.

If you want the short version for maintenance tips dabbing: cooler, smaller, slower. Your lungs and your glass both prefer it.

A quick “is this overkill?” check

If you dab once a week, you might not need a catcher at all. If you dab daily, a catcher pays for itself in less frustration alone.

And if you’re the friend with the always-clean rig, a reclaim catcher is how you stay that person without becoming a full-time glass caretaker.


A reclaim catcher won’t make you a better person. But it will make your rig easier to live with, your airflow more predictable, and your cleaning sessions less frequent. And in a dabbing routine, predictability is underrated.

I still save reclaim sometimes, mostly from dry catchers, mostly for sleepy edibles, stored in a little glass jar away from heat. But I toss it just as often, because not every brown blob deserves a second act. That line gets clearer the longer you do this.

About the Author

Jake Morrison brings years of hands-on experience with cannabis accessories to Oil Slick Pad. They believe in honest reviews, practical advice, and not overpaying for gear.