$ 69.99
The EO VAPE (The Baker) is an electronic nectar collector built for dabbers who want rig-level hits without hauling a whole setup. It’s made for people who like quick, clean concentrate pulls straight from the jar, in the car, or between errands. With a compact 6.5 inch (165mm) body and fast electronic heating, you get on-demand vapor without a torch or messy loading.
The Baker is made for dabbers who live more out of their backpack or car than at a coffee table. If you’re always dipping into jars and want something more efficient (and less sketchy) than a glass straw and a torch, this will feel like an instant upgrade. It also pairs nicely with a good nonstick dab mat if you still keep a small home base sesh setup.
The Baker keeps things simple: power it on, let the tip reach temp, then bring your concentrates up to the heated tip for a controlled pull. You’re tasting what’s in the jar, not what picked up dust off the table, and you don’t have to juggle a red-hot nail or spinning cap.
For the smoothest experience, keep your concentrates in proper concentrate jars so the tip has a clean surface to contact. Soft or saucy textures tend to work really well with this style of device since you can easily guide the hot tip through the material without digging or scraping.
When you’re done, let the tip cool before pocketing it or tossing it back in your bag. Treat it like any other hot dab tool — give it a little time and a quick wipe so it’s ready for the next sesh.
| Product Type | Electronic nectar collector |
|---|---|
| Length | 6.5 inches (165mm) |
| Category | Electronics / Nectar collector |
| Heating Time | Under 10 seconds |
| Charging | USB-C connectivity |
| Brand | What You Need |
Let the device cool before you even think about cleaning. Once it’s cool, wipe the tip to remove any leftover residue. For a deeper reset, you can soak the removable tip in isopropyl alcohol, then rinse and dry thoroughly before you put it back on and use it again.
The Baker is built to work with most common concentrate consistencies — think wax, crumble, sugar, and sauces — as long as they’re in a dish or jar with enough room for the tip. It’s especially handy with low-profile glass containers and heavier-bottom glass jars that you can hold steady while you tap around the corners.
If you like having different textures on hand, you can organize everything together with dedicated storage and packaging options, then just grab one jar and the Baker when you’re walking out the door. It behaves like any other nectar collector: the main thing is just giving it enough space to contact the material without smashing the tip into the glass.
Most dab-ready concentrates work well — wax, budder, sugar, crumble, and similar textures. Super hard shatter can be trickier if it’s in a big chunk, but once it’s broken up or softened a bit, it’s still usable. Keeping your different strains split into labeled mylar bags or jars makes it easy to grab what works best with a nectar collector.
As long as the container opening gives the tip enough room to get in and move around without smashing into the sides, you’re good. Short, wide jars are usually the easiest, and heavy-bottom styles help you avoid tipping while you’re pulling a dab.
At 6.5 inches (165mm), it’s genuinely pocketable but still big enough to feel solid in your hand. It’s a lot easier to toss this in a bag than a full rig and torch, and it makes a solid on-the-go backup even if you already have a bigger setup at home.
Battery life depends on how often and how long you’re hitting it, but it’s built to last through multiple seshes before you need to recharge. Since it uses USB-C, you can usually share chargers with your other electronics or grab one from our general smoke shop products lineup that fits your setup.
No torch needed — that’s the whole point of going electronic here. Some people still keep a traditional rig at home and use The Baker as their travel piece, but it can definitely stand alone as your main way to hit concentrates if you like the nectar collector style.
Try not to bury the hot tip too deep into your concentrates; just touch and pull what you need. Wipe it down after use so buildup doesn’t bake on between seshes. If you let it go too long, a quick soak and rinse brings it back.
Yes — it removes the whole torch and open flame part of the equation, which is what usually puts people off. If you already use glass nectar collectors and want something easier and more portable, this feels like a natural upgrade.