VOOPOO Drag E60 Review

The VOOPOO Drag E60 is a compact, button-fired pod-mod that tops out at 60W with a 2550 mAh internal battery, typically priced around $30.99–$46.99, built for adult nicotine users who want pocketable RDL/DL performance with simple modes and a grippy chassis—but it’s not the most natural fit for tight MTL fans or anyone who hates wiping condensation.

Product Overview

Device Overall Score Pros Cons Ideal For
VOOPOO Drag E60 4.2/5 Punchy output, strong battery, broad coil options Button-only, condensation management, airflow sweet spot is airy RDL/DL users who want a compact daily kit

Final Verdict

The Drag E60 is a compact, practical pod-mod that delivers dependable RDL/DL performance, strong vapor for its size, and battery life that holds up in normal daily rotation. The trade-offs are mostly experience details: it’s button-only, the airflow sweet spot leans airy, and you’ll occasionally clean out gathered condensation.

Who It’s For

  • Adult nicotine users who prefer RDL or airy DL draws
  • People who want a compact kit with a real 60W ceiling
  • Anyone who likes simple modes and coil flexibility

Who It’s Not For

  • Tight MTL fans who want cigarette-like restriction
  • Users who insist on auto-draw
  • People who never want to wipe out a pod bay
VOOPOO Drag E60

How We Tested It

We ran the Drag E60 for a full workweek across commuting, desk breaks, and evening sessions, rotating between the included PnP-TW30 (0.3Ω) and PnP-TW20 (0.2Ω) coils. We tracked Flavor, Throat Hit, Vapor Production, Airflow/Draw, Battery Life, Leak Resistance, Build Quality, Ease of Use, and Portability using repeatable wattage checkpoints and consistent e-liquid ratios. Marcus stress-tested long pulls and higher-watt stability, while Jamal focused on pocket carry, quick sessions, and real-world button behavior.

Our Testing Experience

Day one, I started with the TW30 and let Smart mode get me close, then I fine-tuned from there—34W on my unit, reading 0.32Ω once it settled. The inhale feels clean and quick, with that mesh “snap” right at the start of the pull. With airflow more open, flavor layers stayed separated—sweet top notes stayed bright instead of melting into a warm blur.

Marcus lived on the TW20 at 49–52W. His pattern is always the same: longer pulls, short breaks, repeat. The Drag E60 stayed stable, but he nailed the trade-off: pinch airflow too far and heat builds faster than flavor does. Jamal pocket-carried it hard and liked how planted the pod felt—no wobble, no weird movement, and the airflow setting didn’t drift.

Battery notes were predictable in a good way. On the TW30, I consistently landed around ~230–240 pulls per charge with 3–4 second draws; on the TW20 at ~50W, that dropped to the ~160–175 range. Recharge from empty to full took me about 1 hour 22 minutes on a 5V/2A USB-C setup, and the device got mildly warm, never alarming.

What we liked

  • Fast, consistent ramp with both coils
  • Airy draw keeps flavor from getting “muddy”
  • Battery life feels honest for a 60W pocket kit

Who it is best for

  • Daily RDL users who want a compact setup
  • DL users who don’t need 80–100W headroom
  • People who rotate through different PnP coils

Where it falls short

  • Tight airflow settings feel less satisfying
  • Condensation is managed, not eliminated
  • Button-only won’t please auto-draw fans
VOOPOO Drag E60

Pros & Cons

Pros Cons
Strong RDL/DL performance for size No auto-draw function
Quick ramp and stable output Airflow sweet spot leans airy
Easy-to-understand modes Condensation still needs wiping
Big internal battery for a pocket kit Not ideal for tight MTL
Broad PnP coil compatibility Side filling can be fiddly with wide tips
Premium-in-hand materials and grip ECO mode feels subtle in practice

Details

  • Price: $30.99 (sale listings are common); also listed at $46.99 on brand shop pages
  • Device type: pod-mod kit (refillable pod, replaceable coils)
  • Output: 5–60W; resistance range 0.1–3.0Ω
  • Battery/charging: 2550 mAh internal; USB-C rated 5V/2A; measured full charge ~1h 22m
  • Activation: button ignition only; no auto-draw
  • Pod/airflow: PnP Pod II (4.5 mL); airflow adjusted by rotating pod; easy side filling
  • Included coils: PnP-TW30 0.3Ω (28–36W), PnP-TW20 0.2Ω (40–55W)
  • Materials: zinc alloy, aluminum alloy, leather, PC
VOOPOO Drag E60

Review Score

Metric Score Remarks
Flavor 4.1 Best when airflow is open; clear separation, slightly less “snap” when tightened down
Throat Hit 4.0 Smooth at moderate wattage; can turn a bit scratchy if you choke airflow and push power
Vapor Production 4.5 Dense clouds for a compact kit, especially on the TW20
Airflow/Draw 4.2 Easy to tune; most satisfying in RDL-to-airy DL territory
Battery Life 4.1 Strong daily performance on TW30; TW20 drains faster but remains predictable
Leak Resistance 3.9 Condensation collects where you can clean it; occasional moisture is normal over days
Build Quality 4.4 Solid feel with good grip and no flimsy moving parts
Ease of Use 4.0 Modes are simple; button-only and side filling add minor friction
Portability 4.3 Pocket-friendly with stable pod fit; quick, reliable in short sessions
Overall 4.2 A compact RDL/DL kit with strong fundamentals and manageable quirks

Choosing the VOOPOO Drag E60

Choose the Drag E60 if you want a compact pod-mod with real power headroom, you prefer RDL or airy DL, and you like having access to a wide coil family. Skip it if you need tight MTL, strongly prefer auto-draw, or you’re allergic to any condensation cleanup.

For a tougher, outdoors-first daily carry, Geekvape B60 (Aegis Boost 2) is a better match for rugged use. For higher output and a modern pod ecosystem with more headroom, Vaporesso LUXE XR Max is a stronger fit.

Limitations

The Drag E60’s compromises are more about feel and habits than raw performance.

  • Airflow leans airy; tight MTL is hard to make satisfying
  • Condensation is controlled, but you still clean it out
  • Side filling can be awkward with thick bottle tips

Drag E60 vs Alternatives

Why choose these models

  • Compact kit with a real 60W ceiling and strong internal battery
  • Rotate-to-adjust airflow is quick and stays put in daily carry
  • PnP coil compatibility makes it easy to tune for RDL/DL preferences

Alternatives to consider

  • Geekvape B60 (Aegis Boost 2): rugged positioning with 60W class output
  • Vaporesso LUXE XR Max: 80W pod-mod platform for more headroom
  • SMOK Nord 5: 80W pod system aimed at higher output users

Pro Tips for the VOOPOO Drag E60

  • Break in new mesh coils with shorter pulls for the first half tank to keep flavor clean.
  • If the vape feels scratchy, open airflow slightly before you change anything else.
  • For the TW30, start near 32–35W and move in 1–2W steps; it’s a narrow “sweet spot” coil.
  • For the TW20, keep airflow open and watch heat during chain sessions.
  • Wipe the pod bay every couple of days; that’s where condensation shows up first.
  • Use narrower bottle tips for side filling—wide tips can get messy fast.
  • Lock the device when pocketing it; button mods are safer when carried.
  • If you hear gurgle, pull the pod and dab the base; don’t “fix it” by cranking wattage.
  • Keep an extra coil on hand; swapping coils is the fastest way to reset flavor.

FAQs

Does the Drag E60 work well for tight MTL?

Not really. You can restrict airflow, but the most consistent flavor and smoothness show up in RDL-to-airy DL territory.

How’s the battery in real daily use?

On the TW30 in the mid-30W range, I routinely made it through a workday; the TW20 around 50W drains faster but stays predictable.

Is leakage a problem?

Actual leaking was rare for us, but condensation buildup is normal over days. The airflow/airway design makes it easier to wipe and keep performance consistent.

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.