To clean dab tools without wrecking titanium, quartz, or glass, stick to high proof ISO (91 to 99%), gentle warmth (not a blowtorch), soft wipes, and a full rinse and dry. If you’re “cleaning” by roasting your tool red hot every night, you’re not cleaning, you’re shortening its life.
I’ve been dabbing long enough to remember when everyone used a butter knife-shaped titanium scoop, torched the banger until it glowed, and called the cough a “feature.” We’ve gotten better. Terpier concentrates, nicer quartz, e-rigs, terp slurpers, and way less tolerance for nasty reclaim flavor.
Use ISO for day-to-day grime, warm water and mild soap for the final rinse, and save heat for emergencies only. The safest method looks boring because boring works.
Here’s the quick breakdown I wish somebody drilled into me years ago:
You don’t need a lab bench. You need a small kit that lives near your dab rig, bong, vaporizer, or pipe setup so you actually use it.
Here’s what I keep in rotation, and what I’ve seen hold up after years of sticky fingers.
Everyday Kit (about $15 to $35 total)
Nice-to-Have Upgrades (about $25 to $120)
And yeah, I’m biased because I sell these kinds of setups, but a dab pad is the unsung hero here. A good silicone dab mat keeps your tools from rolling into carpet, catches the little crumbs of shatter, and gives you one “clean zone” instead of turning your whole coffee table into a concentrate pad by accident.
If you’re building a dedicated dab station, a mat is the first thing I’d buy after a decent banger.
This is the part people overcomplicate. The goal is to dissolve sticky oils, not sandblast your gear.
Here’s my safe, repeatable method to clean dab tools without turning titanium chalky or quartz cloudy:
1. Wipe while it’s still warm-ish
After your dab, let the tool cool for 10 to 20 seconds. Wipe the bulk off on a glob mop or a paper towel. Less gunk in the jar later.
2. Soak in ISO
Drop the tool in a small jar of 91 to 99% ISO for 10 to 30 minutes. If it’s a disaster tool you found under the couch, go an hour.
3. Brush gently
Use a soft nylon brush or a fresh swab. If it’s not coming off, soak longer. Don’t go medieval with a metal pick.
4. Rinse with warm water
Warm, not boiling. Especially for quartz and glass. Rinse until it doesn’t feel slick.
5. Dry completely
Air dry or wipe dry. If water sits in joints, grooves, or hollow handles, it’ll make your next sesh taste like wet dog.
That’s it. That’s the whole “dabbing guide” section most people skip because they want a magic solvent.
Titanium is tough, but it’s not invincible. The big mistake is treating titanium like it’s a nail you can just torch clean forever.
I’ve used titanium tools as daily drivers for years, especially for crumble and sugar wax that sticks to everything. Here’s what actually matters:
ISO does most of the work. Acetone works faster, sure, but it can be harsher on finishes and any non-metal parts. If you use acetone, make it occasional, short, and rinse like you mean it.
If you want an external deep dive, look up a reputable acetone Safety Data Sheet and read the ventilation and skin contact guidance. It’s not “scary,” it’s just not a candlelit spa product either.
Light heat to loosen reclaim is fine. Heating titanium until it glows is how you end up with:
If you have to use heat, do a gentle warm-up, then wipe, then ISO soak. I only torch a titanium tip when it’s truly gummed and I’m impatient. It happens. I just don’t pretend it’s the best practice.
That’s real-world dab maintenance that fits a normal life.
Quartz and glass are easy to keep tasting clean, but they punish impatience. The #1 rookie move is thermal shock, the #2 is scraping with something harder than the tool.
If you’ve got a quartz dab tool, quartz insert, or a glass stir stick, don’t do this:
Let it come closer to room temp first. I know, waiting is annoying. Cracking a $25 to $60 quartz tool is more annoying.
And if your quartz looks cloudy, it’s usually not “dirty.” It’s micro-scratches and cooked-on residue from overheating. You can reduce the haze with long ISO soaks and patience, but you can’t un-scratch quartz.
Real talk, the burnt smell isn’t always “dirty tools.” Sometimes it’s old reclaim that got cooked one too many times, especially if you take hot dabs or use a torch-heavy routine.
Here’s how I deal with the nasty stuff without wrecking my gear.
1. Warm the tip slightly, just enough to soften
2. Wipe the bulk off
3. ISO soak 30 to 60 minutes
4. Brush, rinse, dry
If it still smells burnt after that, it might be permanently “seasoned” with old, cooked oils. Some tools never fully come back. It bugs me, but it’s true.
If your dab tool has knurling, grooves, or a textured grip, reclaim loves living there.
And keep that work on a mat. A proper oil slick pad style setup keeps the mess contained, which is the whole point of a dab station in the first place.
Sometimes your tool is clean but your environment isn’t.
If you’re chasing flavor, clean the whole zone. Tools, glass, surfaces, and the jar where you store your concentrates.
If you want another deep dive, check our post on setting up a dab station that doesn’t turn into a sticky junk drawer.
If you only do one thing, do this. It keeps your tools clean enough that deep cleaning becomes rare.
1. After each dab, wipe your tool on a clean swab
2. Wipe the tool again with a swab lightly damp with ISO
3. Rest it on a dedicated dab pad or silicone dab mat, not a random napkin
4. Swap your “dirty swab cup” before it turns into a science project
That’s the low-effort version of dab maintenance that doesn’t feel like chores.
And if you’re a terp nerd in 2026, you already know the trend: lower temps, better flavor, less scorched residue. The cleaner your routine, the easier it is to keep that “fresh jar” taste.
I’ll save you the hype. Most “dab tool cleaner” bottles are just solvents with a new label and a higher price.
Here’s the practical lineup.
Best All-Around (cheap and reliable)
Heavy-Duty (use carefully)
Gentle Finish (final rinse only)
If you want an external authority check on ISO safety, look up NIOSH guidance on isopropyl alcohol exposure and ventilation. It’s dry reading, but it’ll convince you to crack a window.
A mat won’t magically sanitize a tool. But it changes behavior, and behavior is 90% of cleanliness.
A good concentrate pad setup does a few things:
On oilslickpad.com, we see a lot of people upgrading their glass and rigs, then realizing their station is the weak link. Fancy dab rig, fancy banger, then the tool is sitting in a puddle of old reclaim on a ripped-up paper towel. Been there. It’s dumb.
If you want to go deeper, our posts on dab pads, silicone mat sizing, and dab tool basics pair well with this.
And honestly, the best part is boring. Your next dab tastes like the concentrate you paid for, not last week’s reclaim ghost.