I’m going to walk through this like I would if we were at my coffee table, setting up your first rig on an Oil Slick Pad and trying not to scorch anything important. We’ll talk gear, technique, weird little details nobody explained to me, and a few mistakes I made so you don’t have to.
Dabbing is vaporizing cannabis concentrates on a hot surface, then inhaling that vapor through a rig. Instead of a bong bowl full of flower, you are using a banger or nail with a tiny amount of wax, rosin, shatter, or live resin.
The big reason dabbing exploded is simple. Efficiency. Concentrates can hit anywhere from 60 to 90 percent cannabinoids, so one tiny dab can equal several pipe bowls. Less plant material, more flavor, faster onset.
In 2025, concentrates are cleaner and more varied than ever. You have solventless rosin, live rosin jam, diamonds in sauce, cold cure, and all sorts of wild textures that look like dessert and hit like a truck. It is a lot if you are just coming from a basic glass pipe or a simple bong.
Let’s build this from the ground up. If you strip away all the fancy stuff, you really only need a few core pieces for your first dab rig.
At minimum, you need:
Your rig can be a dedicated dab rig or a small bong that you use only for oil. I strongly recommend not mixing flower and concentrates in the same glass. Flower funk sticks around.
Budget Rig Option ($50,80)
Midrange Rig Option ($120,200)
This is a big 2025 question. You have three main paths.
1. Classic torch and banger
2. E-nail that keeps your banger at a set temp
3. All in one e-rig or portable vaporizer for concentrates
Torch and banger is still the cheapest and most flexible route. A half decent butane torch is around 25 to 40 dollars, and a solid quartz banger is maybe 20 to 40. You control the heat with timing.
E-rigs like Puffco Peak Pro or Focus V Carta are plug and play. You press a button, they heat to a set temp, and you do not have to count seconds. Super convenient, but you are in that 250 to 400 dollar range.
If you like gadgets and hate guessing, an e-rig is amazing. If you like simple glass, torches, and seeing your banger glow, stick with the classic setup.
This is the part a lot of beginner guides treat like an afterthought. Personally, I think your dab pad and little dab station setup make or break your experience, especially if you are clumsy like I am.
A dab pad or silicone dab mat is the flat, heat resistant surface that lives under your rig and tools. Think of it as your “do not ruin the table” force field.
A good concentrate pad should do a few things:
Real talk, my first few years of dabbing were full of little burn rings on wood tables and mystery sticky spots. Once I put everything on an Oil Slick Pad, I stopped ruining furniture and it suddenly felt like an intentional dab station, not a crime scene.
Here is where materials and design matter.
Basic Silicone Dab Mat ($10,20)
Oil Slick Pad Style Upgrade ($20,40)
That difference in silicone quality is huge. Medical grade silicone handles higher temps, stains less, and does not get that weird greasy feel over time.
I like a pad that is at least as wide as my rig is tall. So if your dab rig is 8 inches tall, go for something in the 11 x 18 range. You want room for the rig, torch, carb cap, dab tools, and a little jar of concentrate without everything feeling crowded.
Alright, the fun part. Here is the basic “how to dab” process, written for someone who has never hit a rig before.
Clear your table. Put your silicone dab mat or Oil Slick Pad down first. Set your rig in the center, mouthpiece pointing toward you, banger angled away from your face.
Have this within easy reach:
If you are used to a loose couch bong situation, this is a different vibe. Treat it more like a little chemistry setup.
For your first dab, think “grain of rice” or even “half a grain of rice.” Especially with modern live rosin or live resin. Potent stuff.
Use your dab tool to scoop or slice a tiny bit. If you look at it and think “that seems small,” you are probably close to correct.
If you are on torch life:
1. Aim the flame at the bottom and outer sides of the quartz banger.
2. Heat until it just starts to glow faint red, usually 20 to 40 seconds depending on torch and quartz thickness.
3. Turn the torch off, set it safely on the dab pad or another heat safe spot.
Now comes the waiting game. That glowing hot banger is way too hot to dab or you will scorch your lungs and your terps.
For most basic quartz bangers:
You will develop your own timing based on taste. I like a nice low temp dab because I want the flavor, not the dragon breath.
If you are using an e-rig or e-nail:
Once your banger has cooled for your chosen time:
1. Gently place the dab into the banger, try to touch the bottom or inner wall.
2. Immediately place the carb cap on top.
3. Start inhaling slowly through the mouthpiece.
Swirl or move the carb cap a little to move the oil and keep the airflow going. You will see vapor fill the rig just like a mini bong rip.
Inhale for a few seconds, then clear the rig just like you would with a bong.
While the banger is still warm but not crazy hot:
1. Use a dry cotton swab to soak up leftover oil.
2. If you see dark spots, lightly dip the other end in iso and swab again.
3. Let it dry for the next dab.
This tiny bit of cleaning every time is the difference between tasty, clear dabs and that nasty black burnt ring after three sessions.
This is the part nobody really explained to me before my first dab, so I am going to be blunt.
Your first dab might make you cough. Hard. That is normal. You are pulling very dense vapor straight into your lungs. Even if it is low temp, it is still intense.
The high can also feel different from smoking flower. Faster onset. More in your head at first. Then it melts down into the body. Some people describe it as “hyper high” for ten minutes, then a calm, buzzy plateau.
If you have ever overdone it on edibles, this is not that. Dabs hit fast, but they also back off faster. Drink water, sit somewhere comfy, throw on something familiar. You will be fine.
Dabbing looks more intense than hitting a pipe, and torches do not exactly make it look chill to non smokers. There are a few things I wish every new dabber knew.
If you have curious cats or dogs, your Oil Slick Pad becomes even more important. Keep everything on a central dab station so you are not leaving hot tools or sticky jars in random spots.
For legal and health info, I always tell people to check a current source like NORML or local government sites so you know what is allowed where you live.
Regular maintenance beats heavy cleaning every time.
For the rig:
For your silicone dab mat or Oil Slick Pad:
Silicone is forgiving. Glass, not so much. A clean rig and pad make the whole ritual feel nicer, and your concentrates taste better.
Once you are comfortable with beginner dabbing, this is where it gets fun. There is a whole rabbit hole to explore if you want to.
You might experiment with:
You might also realize you mostly just like one or two concentrates, one rig, and your trusty Oil Slick Pad under it. Totally valid. Not everyone needs a glass museum in their living room.
If you want to keep leveling up, I suggest diving into three rabbit holes:
1. Proper cleaning and maintenance of rigs and bangers
2. Temperature experimentation, both torch timing and e-rig presets
3. Dab station organization, including different sizes of silicone dab mats and tool holders
This is also where internal glass snobbery starts to creep in. Some people only use high end glass, some love cheap, sturdy rigs that survive parties. I have broken enough pricey glass that I appreciate a tough, 80 dollar rig sitting on a thick concentrate pad.
Take it slow, stay curious, and treat your little dab station like a ritual spot rather than a mess zone. If beginner dabbing in 2025 is your starting line, you are catching this world at a pretty perfect moment. Cleaner concentrates, smarter gear, better silicone pads, and a community that has already made most of the mistakes for you.
You bring the curiosity, a tiny grain of rice sized dab, and a comfy chair. The rest comes with practice.