STLTH’s 60K is a rechargeable, high-capacity disposable aimed at adult nicotine users who want a long run time plus on-device controls (Eco/Normal/Boost and adjustable airflow) without moving to a pod kit. It’s strong on customization and day-to-day convenience, but it’s chunky, and the mouthpiece can collect condensation if you chain-puff. Vape and nicotine products are for adults only; not for minors, pregnant people, or non-nicotine users; impressions here are subjective, not medical advice.
Product Overview
| Device | Overall Score | Pros | Cons | Ideal For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| STLTH 60K | 4.2/5.0 | Modes + airflow control; screen for juice/battery; long-lasting format | Bulky; condensation needs upkeep; Boost drains faster | Adult nicotine users who want a “set-and-go” disposable with tuning options |
Final Verdict
The STLTH 60K is the rare disposable that feels like a small gadget: the display keeps you honest about battery and e-liquid, and the three modes let you steer the puff from mellow to punchy. Flavor stayed most consistent in Eco/Normal for us, while Boost delivered thicker vapor at the cost of faster recharging. If you can live with the size and you’re okay doing quick mouthpiece wipe-downs, it’s an easy daily driver.
- Who It’s For
- Adults who want a long-lasting disposable with a real screen
- People who like tuning draw feel with airflow + modes
- Users who hate guessing when juice/battery is running low
- Who It’s Not For
- Pocket-minimalists who want something truly tiny
- Chain-puffers who won’t maintain mouthpiece hygiene
- Anyone who dislikes sweeter, high-impact disposable flavor styles

How We Tested It
We ran three STLTH 60K units across a 7-day rotation and scored Flavor, Throat Hit, Vapor Production, Airflow/Draw, Battery Life, Leak Resistance, Build Quality, Ease of Use, and Portability. I focused on consistency and day-to-day reliability, Marcus stressed longer sessions to probe heat and output stability, and Jamal used it strictly as an everyday carry to surface “grab-and-go” issues. We swapped between Eco/Normal/Boost, adjusted airflow in small increments, and tracked recharge time plus condensation frequency.
Our Testing Experience
The first thing I noticed was how the mouthfeel changes with airflow: half-open, the draw lands in a comfortable MTL-leaning pull—dense on the tongue, a clean snap on the inhale, and a steady, slightly warm exhale in Normal. In Boost, the puff gets “thicker” in the cheeks, with a more forward sweetness and a sharper throat hit that feels immediate, like it jumps the line. Eco is the calm setting: smoother, less aggressive, and better for long breaks where you’re taking small pulls without thinking.
In my moderate routine (roughly 200–230 short draws per day), I was charging about every 36–40 hours in Normal. Marcus pushed Boost harder and ended up topping up nightly; Jamal stayed in Eco and stretched closer to two days per charge. From near-empty to full, my USB-C recharge averaged about 50–55 minutes. Leakage wasn’t the story—condensation was. If I ignored it, the mouthpiece would get a slick film that dulled flavor; a quick wipe brought it right back.
- What we liked
- Mode switching actually changes the feel, not just the label
- Screen makes battery/e-liquid management simple
- Airflow adjustment has usable “middle” positions, not just open/closed
- Who it is best for
- Adults who want long runtime and predictable performance
- People who rotate between mellow daytime puffs and stronger evening hits
- Users who value knowing remaining juice/battery at a glance
- Where it falls short
- Bulkier than typical pocket disposables
- Mouthpiece condensation requires basic upkeep
- Boost mode can feel too intense for low-throat-hit preferences

Pros & Cons
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Screen shows e-liquid and battery levels | Bulky profile for jeans-pocket carry |
| Eco/Normal/Boost provides real tuning | Condensation builds up with frequent sessions |
| Adjustable airflow supports fine tweaks | Boost mode increases recharge frequency |
| Rechargeable 1000 mAh battery format | Flavor can feel “maxed out” (sweet-forward) in some blends |
| Consistent draw activation in our units | Disposable format: no refills, end-of-life waste |
Details
- Price: $26.00
- Device type: rechargeable disposable
- Nicotine strength: 20 mg/mL (standard option)
- E-liquid capacity: 25 mL
- Rated longevity: up to 60,000 puffs
- Battery: 1000 mAh, rechargeable
- Charging: USB Type-C; our typical full recharge ~50–55 minutes
- Controls: Eco/Normal/Boost modes, adjustable airflow, display with battery/e-liquid indicators; dual-coil design

Review Score
| Metric | Score | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| Flavor | 4.3 | Clean, accurate, best in Eco/Normal; can get sweet-forward in Boost |
| Throat Hit | 4.2 | Noticeably stronger in Boost; can be sharp if you chain-puff |
| Vapor Production | 4.4 | Dense output on Boost; satisfying volume for a disposable |
| Airflow/Draw | 4.2 | Useful mid-settings; easy to tailor resistance |
| Battery Life | 4.3 | 1000 mAh holds up well; mode choice materially changes runtime |
| Leak Resistance | 3.9 | No major leaks for us; condensation is the main maintenance issue |
| Build Quality | 4.1 | Feels sturdy; screen/port area needs basic care |
| Ease of Use | 4.5 | Simple controls + clear indicators; low learning curve |
| Portability | 3.8 | Carryable, but the larger body is noticeable |
| Overall | 4.2 | Strong “tunable disposable” with a few practical trade-offs |
How to Choose the STLTH 60K?
Pick the STLTH 60K if you want a disposable that behaves like a configurable device: mode switching, airflow adjustment, and a screen that reduces “surprise dead vape” moments. It fits best for adults with moderate-to-higher nicotine tolerance who value convenience and consistency over ultra-compact carry. Trade-offs are size, condensation upkeep, and faster battery drain in Boost.
If you want a smaller, higher-nicotine hit with a flashy screen and two-mode behavior, the Geek Bar Pulse X is a mainstream alternative.
If you want a premium-feel disposable with a display and airflow adjustability but a lower puff ceiling than 60K-class devices, the RAZ RYL Classic 35K is worth a look.
Limitations
The STLTH 60K’s strengths come with obvious trade-offs:
- Bigger body than most everyday disposables, especially in tight pockets
- Condensation management is part of ownership, not an edge case
- Boost mode can feel too aggressive and burns through charge faster
- Disposable lifecycle: when it’s done, it’s done
STLTH 60K Vs. Alternatives
- Why choose these models
- Screen + indicators reduce guesswork
- Eco/Normal/Boost meaningfully changes the puff feel
- Big-tank, rechargeable format for fewer replacements
- Alternatives to consider
- Geek Bar Pulse X: strong feature set, two-mode behavior
- RAZ RYL Classic 35K: screen + airflow in a different form factor
- Vice Ultra: another 60,000-puff class option with 25 mL capacity
Pro Tips for STLTH 60K
- Start in Eco for your first day to learn the baseline draw and sweetness
- Use airflow half-open as a “neutral” reference point before tuning
- If Boost feels harsh, reduce airflow slightly and shorten draw time
- Wipe the mouthpiece routinely; condensation dulls flavor faster than you think
- Don’t leave it in a hot car—battery devices and heat are a bad combo
- Charge with a basic USB-A to USB-C setup if you want steadier, cooler charging behavior
- If the screen looks “off,” clean around the port and let it sit upright for a bit before assuming failure
- Keep it upright overnight to minimize condensation pooling
- If you carry it in a pocket, check airflow position when you pull it out—sliders can move
FAQs
Does the STLTH 60K actually feel different across modes?
Yes. Eco is smoother and less intense; Normal is the most balanced; Boost brings a thicker, louder puff with a sharper throat hit, and you’ll typically recharge more often.
How do you keep flavor from getting “muted” over time?
Mouthpiece upkeep matters. In our use, a quick wipe when condensation builds up did more for flavor clarity than changing airflow.
Is it more MTL or DL?
It’s MTL-leaning in the middle airflow range, but you can open it up for a looser pull. It won’t mimic a true high-power DL setup.
What’s the most practical way to use the battery indicator?
Treat it as a “plan your next charge” tool, not an exact gauge. In Boost especially, expect the battery bar to drop quicker even when the vape still feels strong.
About the Author: Chris Miller