The Vandy Vape Jackaroo 70W Pod Mod Kit is a rugged, IP67-rated pod mod built around a 2000mAh battery and a 5–70W range, aiming at users who want a tougher daily carry with more power headroom than a slim MTL pod. It shines on grip, leak control, and flexibility, but it’s bulkier than typical pocket pods and can feel overbuilt for pure low-watt MTL.
Product Overview
| Device | Overall Score | Pros | Cons | Ideal For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vandy Vape Jackaroo 70W Pod Mod Kit | 4.1/5 | Rugged IP67 build; top airflow helps with leaks; wide coil range | Chunkier carry; mid-power battery limits at higher watts; niche coil availability | Active/outdoor users; MTL-to-RDL switchers; people who prioritize durability |
Final Verdict
The Jackaroo Pod Mod feels like a “work boot” pod system: grippy, confidence-inspiring, and unusually versatile thanks to the VVC coil ecosystem and a real 70W ceiling. It’s not the smallest or prettiest pocket companion, and at higher wattages the 2000mAh battery taps out faster than you’d want, but the airflow control and overall stability make it a dependable everyday option.
- Who It’s For
- Adults who want a tough, drop-resistant pod mod for commuting, work sites, or outdoor use
- MTL users who occasionally want a looser RDL pull without switching devices
- People who value leak resistance and a secure in-hand grip
- Who It’s Not For
- Anyone who wants an ultra-slim, featherweight pocket pod
- High-watt “all-day” chain vapers who expect big-mod endurance
- Users who only ever vape tight MTL at very low wattage and want maximum simplicity

How We Tested
We ran the Jackaroo through daily carry plus desk sessions, rotating short, frequent hits and longer breaks to stress real-world consistency. We scored Flavor, Throat Hit, Vapor Production, Airflow/Draw, Battery Life, Leak Resistance, Build Quality, Ease of Use, and Portability, while swapping coils and tweaking wattage within each coil’s comfort zone. We also tracked condensation under the mouthpiece, pocket survivability, and how stable the draw felt as the battery dropped.
Our Testing Experience
The first thing I noticed—before the first puff—was how the silica-gel grip changes the whole vibe: it sits in the palm like it’s “locked in,” not slippery, not precious.
I started with the VVC-90 (0.9Ω) coil and kept it in a calm 13–14W window, airflow half-open. The draw landed in that satisfying middle ground: not cigarette-tight, but still guided and smooth. Flavor came through clean and properly layered—sweet notes stayed distinct instead of turning into one flat “candy fog.” Throat hit was consistent when I stayed disciplined with airflow and wattage.
Marcus immediately pushed it harder with a VVC-30 (0.3Ω) around 36–38W. That’s where the Jackaroo starts to feel like a different device: warmer vapor, bigger volume, and a more “rounded” mouthfeel—dense but not harsh when the airflow is opened up. Jamal cared less about clouds and more about carry; after tossing it in a bag and pocket all week, he kept coming back to how the top airflow and overall build reduced the “surprise mess” factor, with only light condensation that wiped off fast.
- What we liked
- Stable flavor across MTL-to-RDL styles
- Confident grip and durability feel
- Airflow design that resists leaking in daily carry
- Who it is best for
- Adults who want one pod mod for both low and mid wattage
- People who are rough on gear (bags, pockets, outdoor use)
- Users who want adjustable airflow that actually changes the draw
- Where it falls short
- Battery life drops quickly once you live above ~35W
- It’s chunky compared with slim pod systems
- Coil sourcing can be inconvenient depending on your local shops

Pros & Cons
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Rugged IP67-rated build; grippy chassis | Bulkier than typical pod systems |
| Top airflow helps reduce leaking during carry | 2000mAh battery feels limited at higher wattage |
| Wide VVC coil range supports MTL and RDL | VVC coils may be harder to find locally |
| Clear power control and button firing | More parts to maintain than ultra-simple pods |
Details
- Price: $34.99.
- Device type: pod mod kit (refillable pod, replaceable coils).
- Power range: 5–70W; operating voltage 3.2–4.2V.
- Battery: 2000mAh internal.
- Charging: USB-C; 1.5A input (our full charges averaged about 95 minutes).
- Pod capacity: 4.5mL; top-fill design.
- Coil/resistance support: 0.1–3.0Ω; VVC coil family spans 0.15Ω to 1.2Ω with typical coil wattage ranges from ~7W up to ~60W depending on coil.
- Protection/build: IP67-rated water/dust/shock resistance with zinc-alloy + silicone/silica-gel style grip; top airflow intake.

Review Score
| Metric | Score | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| Flavor | 4.2 | Strong clarity at both MTL and mid-watt RDL when dialed in |
| Throat Hit | 4.0 | Consistent, but very wattage/airflow dependent |
| Vapor Production | 4.1 | Respectable at 0.3Ω; not a “cloud mod” experience |
| Airflow/Draw | 4.2 | Top airflow gives real range from tighter to looser pulls |
| Battery Life | 4.0 | Solid for MTL; noticeably shorter endurance when pushed |
| Leak Resistance | 4.3 | Top airflow and overall design kept carry mess minimal |
| Build Quality | 4.4 | Tough, grippy, confidence-inspiring daily handling |
| Ease of Use | 4.1 | Straightforward controls; coil swaps are simple once familiar |
| Portability | 4.0 | Carryable, but chunky compared with slim pods |
| Overall | 4.1 | A rugged, versatile pod mod that trades slimness for durability |
Choosing the Jackaroo
Pick the Jackaroo if you want a durable pod mod with real wattage range, adjustable airflow, and the option to run everything from tighter MTL to warmer RDL. The key trade-offs are carry size and battery endurance at higher power—if you live above ~35W, expect more frequent charging. Coil availability matters too: if your local shops don’t stock VVC coils, plan ahead.
For simpler, low-fuss MTL with lighter carry, consider the Uwell Caliburn X.
For a smaller, flavor-forward pod with broad pod availability, consider the Vaporesso XROS 3.
Limitations
The Jackaroo’s “rugged pod mod” identity comes with clear compromises.
- Chunkier in pocket than slim stick-style pods
- Battery life is only average once you push mid/high wattage
- VVC coil availability can be inconsistent depending on where you live
- More maintenance touchpoints (condensation wipe-downs, coil planning) than ultra-simple pods
Jackaroo vs Alternatives
- Why choose these models
- You want IP67-style durability in a pod format.
- You like adjusting airflow and power instead of being locked into one draw.
- You want coil flexibility (MTL to warmer RDL) within one device.
- Alternatives to consider
- Geekvape Aegis Boost: similar rugged concept, more compact feel, proven pod-mod ecosystem.
- VOOPOO Argus P1: lighter carry and very fast charging focus for on-the-go sessions.
- Vaporesso XROS 3: simpler pod approach with strong flavor reputation and wide pod compatibility.
Pro Tips
- Start conservative on wattage, then step up in 1–2W increments until flavor peaks
- Stay inside the coil’s recommended wattage range to avoid scorched flavor
- Open airflow as power increases; tighter airflow at higher watts tends to feel harsh
- Let a fresh coil sit after filling so the wick fully saturates before the first session
- Wipe the mouthpiece area daily; condensation is normal even on “leak-resistant” pods
- Don’t overfill—leave a small air gap to reduce pressure-driven seepage
- If you pocket-carry, lock the device when possible to reduce accidental firing risk
- Keep a spare coil and a small tissue in your bag; it prevents “no-coil-day” frustration
- If you use sweeter liquids, expect faster coil fatigue and plan replacements sooner
- Treat “water resistant” as protection, not a lifestyle—dry the device after heavy exposure
FAQs
Does the Jackaroo work better for MTL or RDL?
It’s happiest when you treat it as both: MTL shines on higher-resistance coils at lower wattage, while RDL comes alive on the mid-resistance coils with airflow opened up.
How leak-resistant is it in daily carry?
In my day-to-day use, it stayed clean in pocket and bag carry with only light condensation around the mouthpiece that wiped away quickly.
How often will I need to charge it?
At low-watt MTL use, it can comfortably run through a workday; at mid-watt RDL settings, you’ll likely top it up sooner.
Is it beginner-friendly?
Yes if you’re willing to learn basic coil handling and wattage matching; it’s not as “set-and-forget” as ultra-simple draw-only pods.
About the Author: Chris Miller