Innokin Endura V Box Review

Innokin’s Endura V Box is a compact refillable pod system built around a 1400mAh battery and a 0.99-inch color screen with true 6–30W adjustment, and it fits adult MTL-to-restricted-DL users who want a small “boxy” daily carry with real control—just expect frequent refills from the 2mL pod and don’t buy it for full-on cloud chasing.

Product Overview

Device Overall Score Pros Cons Ideal For
Innokin Endura V Box 4.2/5 Strong battery for size; real wattage control; clear screen 2mL capacity; limited for true DL Adjustable MTL/RDL daily carry

Final Verdict

The Endura V Box hits a sweet spot for a compact pod: it feels more “serious” than a stick-style starter, gives you enough wattage range to tune warmth and throat hit, and stays steady through long, normal days; the trade-off is living with a smaller pod and a performance ceiling that’s clearly aimed at MTL and restricted lung hits, not big airy rips.

  • Who It’s For
    • Adults who want MTL with the option to loosen into RDL
    • Anyone who likes seeing real-time info (wattage, puff count, resistance)
    • Daily carriers who value lockout behavior and pocket-friendly durability
  • Who It’s Not For
    • Cloud-focused DL users chasing high airflow and high wattage
    • People who hate refilling and want larger tanks/pods
    • Anyone who wants a “zero-settings” device with no buttons or screens
Innokin Endura V Box

How We Tested It

This review is for adults who use nicotine only; use is not recommended for minors, pregnant people, or people who do not use nicotine, and all experience notes are subjective—not medical advice. We ran the Endura V Box across commute breaks, desk sessions, and evening stress tests, scoring Flavor, Throat Hit, Vapor Production, Airflow/Draw, Battery Life, Leak Resistance, Build Quality, Ease of Use, and Portability. We rotated MTL and restricted-DL pulls, adjusted wattage in small steps, tracked puff count/time, and watched for heat, spitback, condensation, and pod seepage during refills.

Our Testing Experience

Out of the gate, the Endura V Box felt like a “mini box mod” that happens to be a pod—handy during commutes because I could lock it, pocket it, and not worry about accidental firing. I started tight MTL on the 0.8Ω VCAP pod at 13.5W with airflow mostly closed; the draw came in smooth, and the mouthfeel stayed clean—warm but not sharp—while flavors read accurately instead of getting muddied into one sweet note. Marcus pushed the 0.6Ω pod near 21W and ran longer chains outdoors; the vape got denser and warmer, but it never turned into that hot, hollow blast you get when a small pod is overworked. Jamal kept it “grab-and-go,” using short pulls between tasks; the screen stayed readable, and the auto-lock behavior reduced pocket anxiety. Over a normal day, I averaged about 1.8–2.1mL consumed before a refill; battery landed around a day and a half for my pace, while Marcus could drain it in roughly a heavy day when he kept it warm and punchy.

  • What we liked
    • Easy-to-feel airflow changes without fiddly parts
    • Consistent warmth once dialed in; few surprise “thin” puffs
    • Screen feedback made small tuning changes actually worth doing
  • Who it is best for
    • MTL users who sometimes want a looser, warmer pull
    • Adults who want a pocketable device that still feels “feature-complete”
    • Anyone bothered by unstable output on cheap beginner pods
  • Where it falls short
    • Frequent refills if you vape steadily through the day
    • Restricted ceiling for people who want airy DL performance
    • Some condensation is normal and needs quick wipe-down habits
Innokin Endura V Box

Pros & Cons

Pros Cons
Strong battery life for a compact pod
6–30W adjustment enables real tuning
0.99-inch color screen is glanceable
Airflow control supports tight MTL through RDL
Auto-lock behavior helps pocket carry
Top-fill workflow is quick once learned
2mL pod means frequent refills for steady users
Not a true DL device; output is capped by design
Condensation can build around the pod base
Small pod format can feel “busy” if you dislike maintenance
Panels can pick up cosmetic wear over time

Details

  • Price: $19.50
  • Device type: refillable pod system (VCAP pod platform)
  • Power range: 6–30W adjustable (coil-dependent ceiling; 0.8Ω is effectively a lower-power lane, 0.6Ω opens it up)
  • Pod capacity: 2mL
  • Battery: 1400mAh internal
  • Charging: USB-C, 5V/1A; my typical full charge landed just under 1.5 hours on a basic 1A source
  • Screen + controls: 0.99-inch TFT color screen with power button and +/- adjustment
  • Size/materials: 52 × 89.1 × 20.3 mm; magnesium alloy + PCTG construction
  • Activation: supports draw-activated and button-activated use
Innokin Endura V Box

Review Score

Metric Score Remarks
Flavor 4.3 Clear, “separated” flavor notes at MTL wattages; stays stable as the pod warms up.
Throat Hit 4.2 Easy to tune with wattage and airflow; consistent without sudden harshness when the pod is kept topped off.
Vapor Production 3.8 Satisfying for MTL/RDL, but it won’t mimic airy DL devices.
Airflow/Draw 4.1 Slider is practical and repeatable; the range is useful, though not ultra-precise at the extremes.
Battery Life 4.2 Strong for this size; heavy, warm settings shorten runtime in a predictable way.
Leak Resistance 4.0 Top-fill and fitment do their job; light condensation still shows up with daily use.
Build Quality 4.4 Feels sturdier than typical starter pods; panels and body hold up well in pockets and bags.
Ease of Use 4.3 Fast setup, readable screen, and sensible lock behavior; small learning curve for button combos.
Portability 4.5 Pocket-friendly shape, secure feel, and low “accidental use” stress in real carry.
Overall 4.2 A practical, adjustable MTL/RDL pod that feels like a step up from barebones starters.

How to Choose the Innokin Endura V Box?

Buy the Endura V Box if you want wattage control, a screen, and a compact device that can move between tight MTL and a slightly looser restricted lung pull without feeling flimsy. Skip it if you’re a true DL user, you hate refilling small pods, or you want a completely button-free experience. Prioritize it when your decision factors are battery stability, pocket carry, and day-to-day consistency over maximum airflow.

If you want an even simpler “set it and forget it” pod with broad pod availability, consider the Vaporesso XROS 4.
If you want a very straightforward MTL-focused pod with strong flavor and minimal fuss, look at the Uwell Caliburn G3.

Innokin Endura V Box

Limitations

The Endura V Box is built around practical daily vaping, and that focus creates real trade-offs.

  • 2mL capacity makes refills a routine, not an occasional task
  • Restricted ceiling for users who want airy, high-volume DL
  • Condensation management matters; ignoring it can make the device feel messier than it is

Innokin Endura V Box Vs. Alternatives

  • Why choose these models
    • You want real adjustment in a compact pod without jumping to a full mod
    • You prefer a sturdier, “mini box” grip and a screen you can read quickly
    • You value predictable behavior: stable output, lockout habits, repeatable airflow
  • Alternatives to consider
    • Vaporesso XROS 4: simpler day-to-day operation; easy recommendation for MTL-first users
    • Uwell Caliburn G3: straightforward flavor-forward pod performance in a small format
    • VOOPOO Argus P2: more “featurey” feel for people who like modes and faster charging

Pro Tips for Innokin Endura V Box

  • Start with the 0.8Ω pod and a mid wattage, then adjust in small steps until the vape feels warm but not sharp.
  • After filling, give the pod a few minutes before the first session so the coil stays consistent.
  • Treat airflow like a “stability tool”: tighter airflow often smooths throat hit and makes flavor feel denser.
  • Keep a tissue habit: a quick wipe at the pod base every day prevents condensation from feeling like a “leak.”
  • If you pocket-carry, lean on lock behavior and avoid tossing it in with keys—cosmetic wear happens fast on small devices.
  • For warmer, denser pulls, use the 0.6Ω pod and stay inside its comfortable wattage lane.
  • Refill before the pod runs very low; the last few pulls on a near-empty pod are where consistency drops.
  • If flavor starts to dull, lower wattage slightly and open airflow a touch before assuming the pod is done.
  • Use a basic 1A USB-C source for predictable charge behavior and less heat.

FAQs

Does the Endura V Box work better for MTL or RDL?

It’s best as an MTL device that can loosen into restricted DL when you open airflow and raise wattage, but it’s not designed for airy DL.

What wattage felt best in testing?

The 0.8Ω pod felt most balanced in the low teens, while the 0.6Ω pod handled low-20W warmth without feeling strained.

How do I reduce condensation?

Avoid overfilling, close the fill port cleanly, and wipe the pod base daily; small pods naturally collect moisture during normal use.

Is draw-activation reliable, or should I use the button?

Both work well; draw-activation is convenient on the go, while the button is better when you want consistent timing on longer pulls.

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.