The Rincoe Jellybox Nano is a refillable pod system built around a transparent, “show-the-internals” look, simple controls, and solid MTL-to-restricted-DL flexibility in the budget range. It nails flavor and airflow feel for its class, but trades away adjustable wattage and subtlety—those LEDs can be loud. It’s best for adult nicotine users who want a straightforward, fun daily pod, not for anyone chasing stealth or deep tuning.
Overview
| Device | Overall Score | Pros | Cons | Ideal For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rincoe Jellybox Nano | 4.2/5 | Excellent MTL flavor; effective airflow slider; replaceable coils | No wattage control; very bright LEDs; faster drain on lower-res coil | Adults who want a simple, flavorful MTL-first pod with occasional RDL |
Verdict
The Jellybox Nano wins on what you feel every puff: flavor clarity, a smooth draw, and airflow that actually changes the experience. Build quality is better than its price suggests, and the coil swap system keeps it practical. The trade-offs are real: fixed power behavior limits fine-tuning, the LEDs are attention-grabbing, and battery life falls off notably when you lean on the lower-resistance coil.
Who It’s For
- Adults who prioritize clean MTL flavor and a smooth draw
- Commuters who want simple grab-and-go use (auto-draw works well)
- Users who like replaceable coils instead of tossing pods constantly
Who It’s Not For
- Anyone who needs adjustable wattage or a cooler/softer output
- Stealth users who hate bright lighting
- Heavy chain vapers expecting “all-day” battery on the lower-res coil

Test Method
We ran the Jellybox Nano across Flavor, Throat Hit, Vapor Production, Airflow/Draw, Battery Life, Leak Resistance, Build Quality, Ease of Use, and Portability, rotating it through commutes, desk breaks, and evening sessions. We compared the two included coil styles with matched airflow positions and consistent refill routines, then tracked charging time, condensation, and pocket carry behavior over multiple days. Nicotine products are for adults only; use isn’t recommended for minors, pregnant people, or people who don’t use nicotine, and all experience notes are subjective—not medical advice.
Field Notes
I started the week using the tighter setup first: airflow mostly closed, slower sips, letting the duckbill mouthpiece sit naturally against the lip. The MTL coil gave me that “defined layers” flavor—sweet notes stayed sweet, cooler notes didn’t blur, and the inhale felt smooth instead of papery. Marcus (big hands, high-frequency sessions, the guy who finds heat problems fast) pushed the airflow open and leaned into the lower-res coil; he kept calling the draw “silky” but flagged the obvious: battery dipped into the warning range much faster when he treated it like a constant companion. Jamal (slim build, always moving, pocket-carry obsessed) loved the lanyard convenience but immediately killed the bottom LEDs—too bright for walking around at night.
On charging, my averages were 68–76 minutes from low to full on a 1A USB-C brick, and I got through roughly an 8–10 hour day of intermittent use on the MTL coil; the lower-res coil was closer to a 4–5 hour rhythm before I wanted a top-up. Leak checks stayed clean after several refills, with only light condensation that wiped off easily.
What we liked
- MTL flavor is the headline: clean, accurate, satisfying
- Airflow slider has real range (tight MTL to restricted DL)
- Coils swap quickly, and refills stayed tidy
Who it is best for
- Adults who want MTL most of the time, with occasional restricted DL
- People who value “simple controls, consistent output”
- Anyone who likes visible design and doesn’t mind attention
Where it falls short
- Fixed-power behavior limits tuning for warmth and nuance
- LEDs can be obnoxiously bright in real life
- Battery life drops fast when you live on the lower-res coil

Pros and Cons
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Strong flavor on the MTL coil Airflow adjustment is genuinely effective Auto-draw and button both work reliably Replaceable coils keep running costs reasonable Refills stayed clean with minimal mess |
No adjustable wattage (fixed behavior) LED brightness hurts stealth use Battery life falls off with the lower-res coil Boxy shape feels larger than “Nano” suggests |
Specs
- Price (sale): $21.99
- Device type: refillable pod system with replaceable mesh coils
- Battery: 1000mAh integrated; USB-C charging
- Output: 10W–30W range; practical use is fixed/automatic (no user wattage adjustment)
- Pod capacity: 2.8mL; side-fill silicone plug
- Coils: mesh 1.0Ω (MTL) and mesh 0.5Ω (restricted DL)
- Size/weight: 68.2mm x 54mm x 19mm; about 70g (my scale read 72g)
- Controls/feel: auto-draw + fire button; bottom LEDs can be toggled, but it’s still a bright device in-hand

Scorecard
| Metric | Score | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| Flavor | 4.6 | MTL coil delivers clear, defined flavor with minimal muddiness. |
| Throat Hit | 4.2 | Consistent and predictable with proper liquid choice and airflow. |
| Vapor Production | 4.0 | Strong for restricted DL, moderate for MTL; not a cloud machine. |
| Airflow/Draw | 4.5 | Slider has meaningful range, and the draw stays smooth. |
| Battery Life | 3.7 | Solid on the MTL coil; noticeably shorter on the lower-res coil. |
| Leak Resistance | 4.2 | Stayed dry across refills; only light condensation to wipe. |
| Build Quality | 4.3 | Feels well-assembled; pod fit and button feel stayed consistent. |
| Ease of Use | 4.6 | Simple controls, reliable auto-draw, minimal learning curve. |
| Portability | 3.9 | Light, but boxy and visually loud (LEDs) for true stealth carry. |
| Overall | 4.2 | A flavor-forward, simple pod that shines most as an MTL daily. |
Buying Fit
Choose the Rincoe Jellybox Nano if you want a straightforward refillable pod with replaceable coils and you’re happy tuning by coil + airflow instead of wattage. It fits best for adult nicotine users who prefer MTL (or occasional restricted DL), value flavor accuracy, and don’t mind a louder look. Skip it if you need a slim stealth carry or you’re picky about dialing warmth with power controls. If you want a sleeker pocket profile with a more modern “minimal” vibe, consider the Uwell Caliburn G3. If you want more mode control and a newer platform feel, Vaporesso’s XROS 4 line is a stronger fit.
Limitations
The Jellybox Nano’s biggest misses are the ones you notice fast: it’s visually loud, power behavior isn’t adjustable, and the battery simply isn’t built for heavy lower-res use.
- Fixed output behavior limits fine-tuning for warmth and intensity
- LEDs are excessively bright for stealth or low-profile use
- Lower-res coil use shortens practical battery life sharply
Versus
Why choose these models
- Jellybox Nano: best if you want replaceable coils + strong MTL flavor in a simple device
- You like adjustable airflow that actually changes the draw feel
- You enjoy transparent “gadget” styling and don’t need stealth
Alternatives to consider
- Uwell Caliburn G3: slimmer carry, modern pod platform, very approachable daily MTL
- Vaporesso XROS 4: more output modes and a polished ecosystem feel
- SMOK Acro: more control features and a screen-style experience in a compact body
Pro Tips
- Prime a fresh coil and wait a few minutes after filling before your first long pull.
- Start with airflow mostly closed on the MTL coil; open gradually until the draw stops feeling “stuffy.”
- If the vape feels warmer than you like, tighten airflow slightly and shorten the pull length.
- Turn off the bottom LEDs early if you want less distraction and less pocket “glow.”
- Wipe the pod base and contacts every couple refills to prevent condensation from affecting connection feel.
- If you carry it in a pocket, keep the airflow slider facing inward to reduce lint buildup.
- For the lower-res coil, plan on topping up battery earlier; it’s a shorter-cycle setup.
- Don’t overfill—leave a small air gap so the side-fill plug seals cleanly.
- If you notice gurgle, remove the pod and flick out condensation, then take shorter primer puffs.
- Use the lanyard for active days; it reduces pocket pressure on the pod and keeps it upright.
FAQs
Is the Jellybox Nano better for MTL or restricted DL?
It’s best as an MTL-first device. Restricted DL is enjoyable on the lower-res coil with airflow open, but MTL is where the flavor and consistency feel most dialed-in.
Does it have adjustable wattage?
Not really. You can change the experience with coil choice and airflow, but there isn’t true wattage control on-device.
How bad are the LEDs in daily use?
Bright enough that most people will want the bottom LEDs off for commuting, night use, or any “keep it low-key” situation.
Does it leak?
In my use it stayed dry across refills. Expect light condensation like most pods, but the cartridge and fit were reliable.
How long does the battery last?
It’s closer to a full workday rhythm on the MTL coil, and noticeably shorter on the lower-res coil—plan for earlier charging if you vape heavily.
About the Author: Chris Miller