$ 12.99
The 3-inch ceramic nectar tip is a replacement heating element for 14mm nectar collectors, built for dabbers who prefer the clean, neutral flavor profile that ceramic delivers. At 3 inches long, it keeps your fingers comfortably away from the heat while fitting standard 14mm female joints on most nectar collector bodies.
Flavor chasers who've tried titanium or quartz tips and want something that stays out of the way of their concentrate's natural profile. Also a solid choice for anyone who finds titanium tips get too hot too fast—ceramic's slower heat retention gives you more control over your dab temperature. If you're running a nectar collector as your daily driver, keeping a spare ceramic tip around means you're never stuck waiting for a deep clean.
Swap this tip into your nectar collector's 14mm joint—it should seat snugly without forcing. Heat the tip with a torch until it reaches your preferred temperature. Ceramic takes a bit longer to heat than titanium, so give it 20-30 seconds depending on your torch. Once hot, touch the tip to your concentrate and inhale through the mouthpiece.
The trick with ceramic is patience. It holds heat longer than you'd expect, so you can let it cool slightly after torching for a lower-temp dab that preserves more flavor. If you're used to titanium's instant heat-up, the ceramic learning curve takes maybe two sessions to dial in.
After your session, let the tip cool completely before handling. For regular maintenance, a quick wipe while still slightly warm removes most residue. Deeper cleaning means soaking in isopropyl alcohol, rinsing, and drying before your next use. Work on a dab mat to catch any drips and keep your surface clean.
| Length | 3 inches (76mm) |
|---|---|
| Joint size | 14mm |
| Material | Ceramic |
| Compatibility | Standard 14mm female nectar collectors |
Titanium tips heat up fastest and are nearly indestructible, but some users detect a slight metallic taste, especially at higher temperatures. Quartz tips offer excellent flavor and fast heating but are more fragile—drop one on tile and you're shopping for a replacement. Ceramic sits in the middle: better flavor neutrality than titanium, more durable than quartz, with a slower heat-up that some dabbers actually prefer for low-temp sessions.
The tradeoff? Ceramic can crack if you thermal-shock it (heating it red-hot then dunking in cold water, for example). Treat it with basic respect and it'll last. According to Leafly's guide to dabbing, tip material choice often comes down to personal preference for flavor versus durability.
If your nectar collector has a 14mm female joint (the most common size), yes. Check your current tip's joint size—if it's 14mm, this drops right in. Some smaller portable units use 10mm joints, which won't work with this tip.
About 20-30 seconds with a standard butane torch, depending on flame size. Ceramic heats slower than titanium but holds temperature longer, so you get a wider window for your dab.
Different, not necessarily better. Quartz heats faster and some people prefer its flavor profile. Ceramic is more forgiving if you bump it against your concentrate jar or table edge. Both beat titanium for flavor purity.
Cold-start technique works better with bangers than nectar collectors. With a nectar collector, you're touching the tip directly to concentrate, so you need heat first. That said, ceramic's heat retention means you can let it cool slightly after torching for lower-temp hits.
Let it cool, then wipe off residue with a paper towel or cotton swab. For deeper cleans, soak in isopropyl alcohol for 15-30 minutes, rinse with warm water, and let it dry completely before your next session.
Not from normal use. Ceramic can handle repeated heating and cooling cycles. What it doesn't handle well is sudden extreme temperature changes—don't heat it until it's glowing and immediately dunk it in cold water. Normal torch heating and natural cooling is fine.
With proper care, months to years of regular use. They don't degrade from heat like some materials. The main risk is physical damage—dropping it on hard surfaces or knocking it against things. Keep a dab tool handy instead of using the tip itself to scrape containers.