Innokin Coolfire P60 Review

Innokin’s CoolFire P60 is a slim, 60W refillable pod-mod kit built around a big 3200mAh battery, aimed at adults who want one device that can swing from tight MTL to airy RDL/DTL without moving up to a full box mod. It nails flavor and day-long endurance, but the screen can wash out outdoors and the auto-draw isn’t always the cleanest for true MTL. Best for commuters and all-day desk use; not for no-maintenance vapers.

Product Overview

Device Overall Score Pros Cons Ideal For
Innokin CoolFire P60 4.4/5 Big battery; strong flavor; wide wattage range Auto-draw can feel stiff; screen in sunlight MTL-to-DTL adults who want one daily carry

Final Verdict

The CoolFire P60 feels tuned for real routines: slim in-pocket, plenty of power on tap, and a battery that doesn’t turn your day into a charging schedule. Flavor is the headline—clean, layered, and steady across the wattage range. The trade-offs are practical, not dealbreakers: the OLED can be hard to read in direct sun, and auto-draw can demand a firmer pull when you’re chasing a cigarette-like MTL.

Who It’s For

  • Adults who rotate between MTL and restricted DL
  • People who prioritize battery life over ultra-lightweight kits
  • Users who want simple wattage control plus a pocket lock

Who It’s Not For

  • Anyone relying on ultra-sensitive auto-draw for tight MTL
  • Cloud chasers who want 80W+ headroom
  • Outdoor users who need a bright screen in full sun
Innokin CoolFire P60

How We Tested It

I ran the CoolFire P60 for six days across commuting, desk breaks, and evening sessions; Marcus hammered longer, higher-wattage pulls and Jamal did pocket-and-bag carry. Using the 0.4Ω and 0.8Ω pods, we graded Flavor, Throat Hit, Vapor Production, Airflow/Draw, Battery Life, Leak Resistance, Build Quality, Ease of Use, and Portability with notes at multiple wattages and airflow settings. Vape and nicotine products are for adults only; use isn’t recommended for minors, pregnant people, or people who don’t use nicotine, and our impressions are subjective and not medical advice.

Our Testing Experience

I started “quiet” with the 0.8Ω pod at 13W and airflow nearly closed. On a morning commute, the draw stayed tight and controlled—warm vapor, a crisp little snap in the throat, and a clean, concentrated mouthfeel that didn’t go papery when I took short back-to-back puffs. Jamal (lean, always moving) kept it locked in a jacket pocket, then used auto-draw for quick hits; he liked the slim body, but he had to pull harder than he wanted for true MTL. Nights were Marcus’s lane (broad-shouldered, big lungs): 0.4Ω at 52W, airflow half open. That setup turns dense—almost velvety on the tongue—with brighter top-note separation and a satisfying push on exhale. Battery-wise, my mixed use landed around 27 hours; Marcus drained it in about 22 hours at higher wattage; Jamal stretched just past 50 hours on the 0.8Ω.

What we liked

  • Flavor stays clear at both 13W MTL and 50W+ RDL/DTL
  • The lock switch makes pocket carry low-stress
  • Airflow slider gives real range, not just “slightly less airy”

Who it is best for

  • Adults who want one kit for MTL mornings and RDL evenings
  • Battery-first users who hate midday charging
  • People who prefer simple wattage control over complex modes

Where it falls short

  • Auto-draw can feel stiff for cigarette-tight MTL
  • Screen visibility drops fast in bright daylight
  • Liquid level is harder to eyeball once the pod is seated
Innokin CoolFire P60

Pros & Cons

Pros Cons
Clean, layered flavor on multiple pod options Auto-draw can require a firm pull
3200mAh endurance fits all-day use OLED can wash out in sun
6–60W range covers MTL through DTL Pod liquid level can be hard to read
Lock switch improves pocket safety Condensation needs occasional wipe
Adjustable airflow has meaningful range Taller pocket carry than mini pods

Details

  • Price: $30.99
  • Device type: refillable pod-mod kit (pod system)
  • Output: 6–60W
  • Battery: 3200mAh internal
  • Charging: USB-C, 5V/2A; my full recharge averaged about 1 hour 55 minutes (low battery to full)
  • Pod capacity: 4mL (2mL variant exists)
  • Pod/coil options (PZP Max): 0.8Ω (12–14W), 0.6Ω (18–23W), 0.4Ω (40–60W)
  • Activation + UI: button and auto-activation, 0.69-inch OLED, manual lock switch
Innokin CoolFire P60

Review Score

Metric Score Remarks
Flavor 4.6 Clear separation and consistency across pods
Throat Hit 4.3 Strong when tuned right; varies with auto-draw style
Vapor Production 4.4 Dense output on 0.4Ω at higher wattage
Airflow/Draw 4.1 Useful slider range; auto-draw can feel demanding for tight MTL
Battery Life 4.7 Long runtime across mixed use patterns
Leak Resistance 4.2 No true leaks; minor condensation with heavy sessions
Build Quality 4.4 Solid feel, good buttons, pocket-friendly lock
Ease of Use 4.2 Simple wattage approach; visibility and pod level checking hold it back
Portability 4.3 Slim and lockable; still a “real device” in smaller pockets
Overall 4.4 Big-battery versatility with a few practical quirks

Choosing the CoolFire P60

Pick the CoolFire P60 if you want one refillable device that can handle MTL at 12–14W and still open up for RDL/DTL at 40–60W without stepping into bulky box-mod territory. It suits adults who value battery life, adjustable airflow, and straightforward wattage control, and who don’t mind wiping occasional condensation. Skip it if you demand ultra-sensitive auto-draw, a bright outdoor screen, or you never plan to leave tight MTL.

If you want simpler, pocket-first MTL: Vaporesso XROS Pro (lighter carry, very low fuss).
If you want more “open” pod-mod headroom: Vaporesso Luxe XR Max (airflow range and higher output feel).

Innokin CoolFire P60

Limitations

The CoolFire P60’s weaknesses are mostly daily-life friction points rather than performance failures.

  • Auto-draw can require a stronger inhale than expected for tight MTL
  • OLED readability drops in direct sunlight
  • Checking remaining e-liquid is less convenient once the pod is seated

P60 vs. Others

Why choose these models

  • 3200mAh + 60W in a slim, carryable shape
  • Pod options cover MTL, RDL, and DTL with solid flavor
  • Lock switch + simple wattage interface fits daily carry

Alternatives to consider

  • Vaporesso Luxe XR Max: broader airflow feel, “bigger” output character
  • Geekvape Aegis Boost series: tougher body for rougher environments
  • OXVA Xlim Pro: lighter, smoother tight-draw MTL experience

Pro Tips for the CoolFire P60

  • Start at the low end of the recommended wattage and climb slowly to your comfort point
  • For tight MTL, close airflow first, then fine-tune wattage in 1–2W steps
  • If you rely on auto-draw, test it with your typical inhale style before committing to it daily
  • Wipe the pod base and contacts every refill to keep condensation from creeping
  • Keep the lock engaged before pocketing; don’t trust “button feel” alone
  • Use a 2A USB-C wall block to keep recharge time predictable
  • For 0.4Ω use, match e-liquid to higher output (avoid very thin mixes that can feel sharp)
  • If flavor dulls, check for airflow slider lint/dust—pocket carry can clog it
  • Don’t chain-puff at max wattage; give the wick a few seconds between pulls
  • If you vape outdoors often, memorize your preferred wattage so you don’t depend on screen visibility

FAQs

Does the CoolFire P60 work better with button fire or auto-draw?

Button fire felt more consistent for tight MTL control. Auto-draw was fine for quick RDL pulls but could require a firmer inhale when I tried to mimic a cigarette-tight draw.

Which pod setup felt best for everyday use?

For me, the 0.8Ω pod around 13W delivered the cleanest, most focused flavor for short sessions, while the 0.4Ω pod around the low-50W range was the “after work” option for denser vapor.

Any common annoyance during daily carry?

The biggest one was outdoor readability—the OLED is fine indoors, but it’s easy to lose in bright daylight.

Does it leak?

I didn’t get true leaks, but I did see normal condensation after heavier sessions, which is easy to manage with a quick wipe during refills.

About the Author: Chris Miller

Chris Miller is the lead reviewer and primary author at VapePicks. He coordinates the site’s hands-on testing process and writes the final verdicts that appear in each review. His background comes from long-term work in consumer electronics, where day-to-day reliability matters more than launch-day impressions. That approach carries into nicotine-device coverage, with a focus on build quality, device consistency, and the practical details that show up after a device has been carried and used for several days.

In testing, Chris concentrates on battery behavior and charging stability, especially signs like abnormal heat, fast drain, or uneven output. He also tracks leaking, condensate buildup, and mouthpiece hygiene in normal routines such as commuting, short work breaks, and longer evening sessions. When a device includes draw activation or button firing, he watches for misfires and inconsistent triggering. Flavor and throat hit notes are treated as subjective experience, recorded for context, and separated from health interpretation.

Chris works with the fixed VapePicks testing team, which includes a high-intensity tester for stress and heat checks, plus an everyday-carry tester who focuses on portability and pocket reliability. For safety context, VapePicks relies on established public guidance and a clinical advisor’s limited review of risk language, rather than personal medical recommendations.

VapePicks content is written for adults. Nicotine is highly addictive, and e-cigarettes are not for youth, pregnant individuals, or people who do not already use nicotine products.