Logic Power Starter Kit Review

The Logic Power Starter Kit is a small, cigarette-shaped device that leans on a closed, prefilled setup instead of knobs, screens, or refill bottles. The experience ends up hinging on three variables: how steady the draw sensor feels, how the high-strength cartridge lands on the throat, and how livable the small battery is in a normal day. I reviewed it because this format still gets picked for quick breaks and pocket carry. The tradeoffs show up fast.

Logic Power Starter Kit Review

What is the Logic Power Starter Kit?

It’s a rechargeable cigalike-style vape that uses prefilled, disposable screw-in cartomizer-style refills, with draw activation and charging through a 510-USB charging adapter. Typical listings describe a 300mAh battery paired with a 1.6 mL prefilled cartridge at 27mg (2.7%) nicotine, with a claim of around 400 puffs per cartridge. Flavor options commonly include Tobacco and Menthol, and some listings also show Cherry. Main risks in day-to-day use come from the high nicotine strength, dry or sharp throat feel on longer pulls, and limited endurance from the small battery.

Why choose the Logic Power Starter Kit?

This fits adult users who want a cigarette-like hold and short MTL pulls, and who prefer a simple routine with prefilled refills over a refillable pod. It also fits people who like strong nicotine impact and don’t want to manage settings, airflow sliders, or a juice bottle. Tobacco and menthol profiles suit users who don’t chase dessert sweetness.

This misses for people who need all-day battery without a midday top-up, want broader flavor variety, or want a lower-nicotine path. It also tends to annoy users who want an ultra-tight MTL draw, dislike cooling, or are sensitive to dryness on higher-strength cartridges.

Logic Power Starter Kit Review

How We Tested It

We tested the Logic Power Starter Kit for 3 days, landing around 100–300 puffs per day depending on work breaks and commute gaps. I tracked draw reliability, condensation, leak signs, and charging behavior, then logged flavor accuracy and puff-to-puff consistency across each cartridge. Marcus pushed longer, repeated pulls to probe heat buildup and harshness under heavy use. Jamal carried it in a pocket during commuting to watch for lint issues, mouthpiece comfort, and accidental mess. The nicotine strength we used was the standard 27mg (2.7%) cartridge that commonly ships with the kit.

Performance Scores of the Vape

Test window: 3 days, roughly 100–300 puffs/day across typical short sessions
Reference setup: 27mg (2.7%) prefilled cartridge; draw-activated use
Scoring: objective checks (leaks/condensation/charging stability) plus subjective feel (flavor/throat hit/draw)

Metric Score Remarks
Flavor 3.7/5 Tobacco stayed consistent early; sweetness and “paper” note rose later in the day
Throat Hit 4.2/5 High-strength cartridge delivered a firm hit; longer pulls leaned sharp and dry
Vapor Production 3.0/5 Modest output, closer to a cigalike baseline than modern disposables
Airflow/Draw 3.6/5 Reliable activation, but draw felt slightly airy for ultra-tight MTL fans
Battery Life 2.9/5 Small battery forced top-ups; heavy use made it feel short-legged
Leak Resistance 4.1/5 No true leaks in pockets; light condensation showed up at the mouthpiece
Build Quality 3.8/5 Threads held fine; finish showed small wear from pocket carry
Ease of Use 4.6/5 Simple screw-in cartridge routine; no settings and no learning curve
Portability 4.8/5 Pocket-friendly shape; easy to carry without thinking about it
Overall 3.9/5 Strong for simplicity and portability, held back by battery limits and narrow performance ceiling
Logic Power Starter Kit Review

Our Testing Experience

Our Testing Results

I ran the Logic Power as a break-device: short pulls, then back into a pocket. Day one landed near the low end of our range, and it behaved cleanly—no misfires, no odd heat, and no liquid showing at the threads after normal use. Day two was heavier, and the limits started to show. The battery felt like the bottleneck, not the cartridge, and I ended up charging earlier than I wanted to.

Marcus took repeated pulls in tighter succession. The device didn’t get alarmingly hot, but the throat feel turned sharper when he treated it like a higher-output device. Jamal’s notes lined up with what I saw: the mouthpiece area picked up light condensation after a run of quick sessions, and pocket lint was the bigger enemy than leakage. A quick wipe kept the mouth-end from feeling damp, and the cartridge connection stayed stable when screwed in snug.

Draw Experience

Tobacco was the baseline: a dry, cigarette-adjacent profile with a mild sweetness that became more noticeable after repeated sessions. On short pulls it stayed steady; on longer draws it picked up a faint “paper” edge that made me keep sessions tighter. Menthol came through cleaner. The cooling effect covered some of the dryness, yet it also made the throat hit feel more immediate, especially in quick back-to-back pulls.

Cherry, where available, read as a candy-style top note rather than a dark fruit. It started bright, then flattened after a longer stretch of use, with sweetness lingering on the lips more than I wanted.

Logic Power Starter Kit Review

Pros & Cons

Pros Cons
Simple routine with screw-in, prefilled refills Small battery feels limiting under heavy daily use
Strong, immediate nicotine delivery at the listed strength Narrow flavor range compared with modern devices
Very pocketable, cigarette-like size and weight Vapor output stays modest even with longer pulls
Draw activation behaved reliably in short sessions Condensation can build at the mouthpiece over time
Threaded connection stayed stable; no pocket leaks in our run Longer pulls can feel sharp and dry on the throat
No settings, no airflow tuning, no refill mess Finish can show small wear from keys/coins in a pocket

Key Specs

Spec Details
Device type Rechargeable cigalike-style device
Activation method Draw-activated
Battery capacity 300mAh
Cartridge/refill style Prefilled, disposable screw-in cartomizer-style refill
Cartridge capacity 1.6 mL
Nicotine strength 27mg (2.7%)
Claimed puffs per cartridge ~400
Charging method 510-USB charging adapter
Charge time -
Coil type -
Coil resistance -
Airflow control -
Display/indicators -
Common flavors listed Tobacco, Menthol (Cherry also appears in some listings)
Refill compatibility notes Logic Power refills are sold as separate cartridges/packs
MSRP / typical street price -
Logic Power Starter Kit Review

Logic Power Starter Kit Vs. Alternatives

Choose the Logic Power when you want a cigalike hold, a screw-in prefilled routine, and a high-strength cartridge in a minimal device.
If you want a similar closed-system feel but a different ecosystem, Vuse Solo is a straightforward draw-activated cigalike-style alternative with a long track record in the category.
If you prefer a thicker pen-style body and capsule swapping, Logic Pro is positioned as a beginner vape pen using sealed capsules (and it’s commonly described as button-activated).

Pro Tips for Logic Power Starter Kit

  • Keep pulls short and consistent; the cartridge tastes cleaner when you avoid long drags
  • Wipe the mouthpiece area once or twice a day if you notice dampness from condensation
  • Screw the cartridge in until it seats, then stop; over-tightening can make removal annoying
  • When charging, keep the connection clean; threads pick up pocket lint faster than expected
  • Use a dedicated pocket or sleeve; keys and coins will scuff the finish and can press the mouth-end
  • If the draw starts feeling harsher, slow down the session pace for a few minutes instead of chain-pulling
  • Store it upright when possible; it keeps the mouth-end drier between sessions
  • Rotate flavors by cartridge rather than switching mid-session; your palate reads the profiles more clearly

FAQs

How long does one cartridge last in real use? 

The common claim is about 400 puffs, but shorter or longer pulls change that fast. In our 100–300 puff days, one cartridge could cover a day for lighter use and fell short for heavier use.

How do you charge it? 

The kit is commonly sold with a 510-USB charging adapter. You remove the cartridge, attach the adapter to the battery end, then plug into USB power.

Does it have buttons or settings? 

It’s listed as draw-activated, with no settings to tune.

What refills fit it? 

Listings describe Logic Power refills as separate prefilled cartridges, commonly sold in Tobacco and Menthol.

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.