Adjust Vape Reviews: MyCool 40K, MyFlavor 40K & More

Control is the only real promise that matters here. Adjust Vape sells that idea hard. The lineup focuses on knobs, toggles, and modes. I wanted to see whether those controls feel useful in daily use.

Across this review, our team treated each device like a normal carry. Short breaks. Longer sessions. A lot of pocket time. We tracked draw feel, flavor stability, and battery behavior as the days piled up.

I handled the core testing and the scoring. Marcus Reed chased higher output and heat behavior. Jamal Davis stressed portability and grab-and-go habits.

Product Overview

Device Pros Cons Ideal For Price Overall Score
Adjust MyCool 40K Ice control feels real, steady draw Can get sharp on high ice Menthol fans who want tuning 1220 4.4
Adjust MyFlavor 40K Dual flavor concept works, fun ratios Learning curve, can mute notes Tinkerers who swap profiles often 1925 4.2
Adjust MySweet 40K Sweetness dial helps harsh flavors Sweet levels can feel sticky Candy profiles, smoother edge 1322 4.3
Adjust MySour 40K Sour control adds bite, clear “snap” Sour on high can fatigue fast Sour lovers who want options 1320 4.1
Adjust MyRusher 40K Power modes hit harder, big battery Turbo can run hot for heavy users Former heavy smokers chasing punch 1725 4.5

Testing Team Takeaways

I kept coming back to one theme. The controls do change the experience. That part is real in use. The trade-off shows up right after. Stronger settings can sharpen throat feel. Higher modes can push warmth into the body of the device. I found myself using the dials like a steering wheel. “Two clicks down and it stops feeling edgy.” That pattern repeated across the week.

Marcus treated these like stress tests. Longer pulls. Back-to-back sessions. He watched heat and stability. He also watched coil behavior by taste drift, not by claims. When the power went up, the flavor got louder at first. Next came warmth at the mouthpiece. “Turbo feels good, then it turns into a hand-warmer.” He liked MyRusher most, yet he wanted restraint from it.

Jamal stayed practical. Pocket carry, car cupholder, bag drops. He cared about mouthpiece comfort and accidental mess. The Adjust bodies felt solid enough for daily carry. The screens helped him avoid dead surprises. “I can glance once, then I know the rest of my day.” He preferred MyCool and MySweet, since they felt calmer in short sessions.

Adjust Vape Vapes Comparison Chart

Spec MyCool 40K MyFlavor 40K MySweet 40K MySour 40K MyRusher 40K
Device type Disposable, rechargeable Disposable, rechargeable Disposable, rechargeable Disposable, rechargeable Disposable, rechargeable
Main adjust feature Coolness levels Dual flavor ratio settings Sweetness levels Sourness levels Power modes
Nicotine range Typically 5% salt nic Typically 5% salt nic 5% salt nic listed 5% salt nic listed 5% salt nic listed
Activation Draw-activated Draw-activated Draw-activated Draw-activated Draw-activated
Battery Rechargeable 850 mAh listed 850 mAh listed 850 mAh listed 1000 mAh listed
Charging USB-C USB-C USB-C USB-C USB-C
E-liquid capacity Commonly ~20 mL 20 mL listed 20 mL listed 20 mL listed 20 mL listed
Coil Mesh style Mesh coil Triple mesh listed Triple mesh listed Dual mesh listed
Airflow Adjustable Adjustable Adjustable Adjustable Adjustable
Display Screen indicators Screen indicators Screen indicators Screen indicators Screen indicators
Flavor focus Menthol profiles Blendable pairs Candy and fruit candy Sour candy fruit Higher impact fruit, mint, sour
Best draw style RDL leaning Restricted lung hit feel RDL leaning RDL leaning RDL leaning
Leak resistance Good in pocket use Good if kept upright Good if not overheated Good, watch condensation Good, watch heat modes

What We Tested and How We Tested It

We built the scoring around daily-use friction. Flavor came first. We judged accuracy, intensity, and how long it stayed consistent. A candy note that turns “flat” after a day loses points. A fruit blend that stays crisp keeps points.

Throat hit stayed subjective in every note. We treated it like texture. Some settings feel smooth. Others feel sharp. We did not treat that as health data. We treated it as user preference data.

Vapor production got measured by what the device can deliver without turning unpleasant. Big clouds matter less if the draw turns hot. Airflow and draw smoothness got tracked by resistance, whistle, and turbulence. We also tracked how stable the draw stayed when battery dropped.

Battery life required real days, not claims. Jamal tracked “sessions per charge” in short bursts. Marcus tracked “minutes of heavy use” with higher modes. Charging behavior mattered too. A device that warms oddly on charge loses points in build quality and reliability.

Leak and condensation control showed up in pocket carry. Mouthpiece wetness. Gurgle. Any seep at the airflow toggle. Build quality covered fit, finish, screen readability, and how the body handled daily knocks. Ease of use covered learning curve, control clarity, and how quickly a new user can get a predictable draw.

Portability stayed separate from build quality. A device can feel solid, yet still carry poorly. Thick bodies print in pockets. Sharp edges annoy. Those details matter for adult users who actually carry devices all day.

All observations here describe product use only. None of this replaces medical advice. Nicotine remains addictive.

Adjust Vape Vapes Our Testing Experience

Adjust MyCool 40K The Ice Dial Workhorse

Our Testing Experience

MyCool lived in my rotation the longest. The coolness dial changes the entire draw. That part hits fast. At low coolness, fruit notes come through more clearly. The throat feel stays softer. With higher coolness, the draw tightens up. The exhale gets that cold edge that menthol fans chase.

Jamal carried it on commute days. He liked the screen. He also liked how the mouthpiece felt when he took short pulls. “This one feels clean in the pocket.” He kept ice in the middle range. Under those settings, the device stayed calm. It also stayed predictable during quick sessions.

Marcus pushed the ice high and stayed there. That revealed the real limit. Flavor gets louder for a moment. Next comes a sharper throat feel. Then the cooling can start masking the base blend. “It’s cold enough to bury the fruit.” Heat control stayed decent on normal output. Under heavier use, the body warmed, yet it did not feel alarming.

I watched for condensate. MyCool did well if I kept it upright between sessions. A pocket carry day still produced some mouthpiece moisture. It stayed manageable. I wiped it once, then kept moving.

Draw Experience & Flavors

The draw feels slightly restricted. It sits in that “restricted lung” zone for me. On low coolness, the inhale feels round. The throat feel stays steady. As the coolness climbs, the draw feels sharper. The cold edge shows up earlier in the inhale. Exhale feels cleaner, yet also more forceful.

Baja Splash was my “baseline” flavor. On low coolness, it tastes like a bright tropical drink vibe. The inhale starts sweet. A light tart note follows. With medium coolness, the finish turns crisp. The cold edge makes the top notes pop. With high coolness, the fruit starts fading behind the chill.

Blue Razz Ice was aggressive by design. Even at mid coolness, it hits with a candy-blue note. The inhale feels slightly prickly. The throat feel tightens as you raise the dial. Marcus liked it under heavier pulls. “This is the one that actually stays loud.” Jamal backed off one level. He wanted less bite.

Miami Mint felt like a control sample too. The mint note stays direct. Under low coolness, it still feels minty. Under high coolness, it turns into a colder, dryer finish. That dryness can feel harsh over long sessions. Short bursts worked better.

Dragon Strawnana leaned creamy. The strawberry note shows up first. Banana follows. With medium coolness, it tastes like a chilled smoothie. The inhale feels soft. The exhale stays sweet. Under high coolness, that cream note thins. The blend becomes more “cold fruit” than “fruit cream.”

Sour Strawberry Dragonfruit balanced candy and tart. On low coolness, the sour part feels like a quick pinch at the front. The dragonfruit sits behind it. With medium coolness, the sour feels cleaner. The throat hit stays smoother than expected. Jamal kept coming back to it. “It doesn’t get old fast.”

Watermelon Ice did what it says. The watermelon reads as fresh candy. The ice finish is the main character. With higher coolness, the watermelon becomes a faint sweetness. The device feels “icy” more than “watermelon.” That is fine for menthol-first users.

After a week, my best draw experience came from Sour Strawberry Dragonfruit at mid coolness. Dragon Strawnana at mid coolness stayed second. Those two kept flavor clarity without turning sharp.

Pros & Cons

Pros Cons
Adjustable coolness gives real control High coolness can mask flavors
Draw stays consistent in normal use Mouthpiece can collect moisture in pocket days
Screen helps daily management Icy profiles can fatigue some users
Good for short sessions Not ideal for users who dislike menthol edge

Key Specs & Flavors

  • Price: commonly listed around 1220
  • Device type: rechargeable disposable
  • Nicotine strength options: commonly listed as 5% salt nicotine
  • Activation method: draw-activated
  • Battery: rechargeable (capacity varies by listing)
  • Charging port: USB-C
  • Power and airflow: adjustable control present on the platform
  • Display: battery and e-liquid style indicators on screen
  • Coil: mesh-style heating element
  • Airflow style: adjustable, restricted-lung leaning
  • Leak resistance: solid in daily carry with basic care
  • Build: solid shell, readable screen
  • Flavors seen across listings: Baja Splash, Blue Razz Ice, Cherry Fuse, Cherry Strazz, Dragon Strawnana, Mango Magic, Miami Mint, Peach+, Scary Berry, Sour Apple Ice, Sour Lush Gummy, Sour Strawberry Dragonfruit, Summer Splash, Tigers Blood, Watermelon Ice

Review Score

Metric Score Remarks
Flavor 4.4 Clear flavors at low-mid coolness, masking appears at high settings
Throat Hit 4.3 Smooth at mid levels, sharper as coolness rises
Vapor Production 4.2 Dense enough for RDL, without constant turbulence
Airflow/Draw 4.3 Consistent resistance, easy to tune for short pulls
Battery Life 4.3 Holds up for daily carry patterns, screen prevents surprises
Leak Resistance 4.2 Minor condensation on pocket days, no frequent seep issues
Build Quality 4.4 Solid feel, good screen readability
Ease of Use 4.5 Dial behavior is intuitive after a few sessions
Portability 4.6 Pocket-friendly body and mouthpiece comfort
Overall 4.4 Strong daily carry, best when the ice dial stays moderate

Adjust MyFlavor 40K The Blend Switch Showpiece

Our Testing Experience

MyFlavor is the “toy” in this lineup, yet it can still be practical. The dual flavor concept changes how you vape. You stop chasing one perfect flavor. You start tuning ratios. That keeps the device interesting over long stretches.

I used it during work breaks. The controls pulled me into small experiments. One setting gave me a clean single flavor. Another setting blended. The blend settings can either improve balance or create muddy overlap. That depended on the pairing.

Marcus tested it outdoors and at home. Higher output settings made the blend feel thicker. He also noticed the point where a blend starts losing definition. “It’s loud, then it gets smeared.” He liked using one chamber at a time, then blending only at the end of a session.

Jamal liked the concept, yet he wanted simplicity. On commuting days, he preferred fixed profiles. He still used MyFlavor when he had time to think. “This isn’t my panic button vape.” That is a fair summary.

Condensation stayed similar to MyCool. Upright storage helped. Pocket carry produced a bit of mouthpiece moisture. The device stayed usable without fuss.

Draw Experience & Flavors

The draw feels slightly more open than MyCool for me. It still sits in restricted-lung territory. The big difference is how flavors layer. You can taste “top notes” from one side and “base notes” from the other. That becomes the entire point.

Orange Strawberry tasted like two clean lanes. Orange comes first. Strawberry sits behind it. In solo mode, orange tastes like bright candy citrus. Strawberry tastes like soft berry sweetness. In blend mode, the inhale feels smoother. The exhale tastes like a mixed fruit chew. Too much blend, though, makes it feel syrupy.

Pineapple Ice Peach had a sharp pineapple edge. Peach softens it. In solo pineapple, the inhale feels tangy. Throat feel tightens slightly. In solo peach, the draw feels smoother. With blending, the pineapple becomes “front bite.” Peach becomes “back cushion.” Marcus preferred more pineapple. “Peach keeps it from getting weird.”

Raspberry Watermelon came across as juicy. Raspberry is the darker note. Watermelon is the brighter sweetness. In solo watermelon, it can feel thin. In solo raspberry, it can feel heavy. Blend mode gave the best draw texture. The inhale stayed smooth. The exhale felt fuller.

Tangerine White Gummy tasted like candy texture, not candy sugar. Tangerine brings a citrus pop. The gummy note brings a soft chew-like finish. Blend mode can either make it fun or make it confusing. I kept it near a mild blend. Jamal liked that balance. “This tastes like a bag candy mix.”

Watermelon B Pop read like candy melon with a blue note. In solo mode, it feels simple. In blend mode, it becomes louder and sweeter. High blend levels made it feel sticky to me. I backed off. The draw felt cleaner after that.

Midnight Ice Chill, when present as a pairing option, leaned toward cold sweetness and dark fruit vibes. On solo “ice” leaning settings, the inhale turns sharp. On a lighter mix, the finish feels crisp without becoming harsh. Marcus ran this higher than I did. He liked the punch.

My best draw experience came from Raspberry Watermelon in a moderate blend setting. Pineapple Ice Peach took second place with a pineapple-forward mix.

Pros & Cons

Pros Cons
Dual chambers add real variety Blend settings can muddy flavor definition
Great for users who get bored fast Takes time to learn preferred ratios
Screen and controls feel purposeful Not the simplest option for commuters
Strong flavor range across pairings Can feel too sweet at high blend levels

Key Specs & Flavors

  • Price: commonly listed around 1925
  • Device type: rechargeable disposable
  • Nicotine strength: typically listed as 5% salt nicotine
  • Activation: draw-activated
  • Battery: commonly listed as 850 mAh
  • Charging: USB-C
  • Flavor adjustment: dual chamber with adjustable ratio settings
  • Coil: mesh coil heating described on retailer pages
  • E-liquid: commonly listed around 20 mL
  • Display: battery and setting indicators
  • Flavor options seen on listings: Black Razz Baja, Blue Razz Ice, Midnight Ice Chill, Orange Strawberry, Pineapple Ice Peach, Raspberry Watermelon, Strawberry Banana, Strawberry Mint Candy, Tangerine White Gummy, Watermelon B Pop, Watermelon Mango Peach (availability varies by retailer)

Review Score

Metric Score Remarks
Flavor 4.4 Best when ratios stay moderate, strong clarity in solo modes
Throat Hit 4.1 Smooth on mild blends, sharper on high intensity mixes
Vapor Production 4.2 Dense enough for satisfying pulls, without constant flooding
Airflow/Draw 4.2 Slightly open restricted draw, stable across sessions
Battery Life 4.1 Good daily use, heavier play with settings can drain faster
Leak Resistance 4.1 Typical condensation behavior, manageable with upright rests
Build Quality 4.3 Controls feel solid, screen stays readable
Ease of Use 3.9 Learning curve exists, especially for new users
Portability 4.0 Pocketable, yet it rewards slower use more than rush use
Overall 4.2 Best for tinkerers who enjoy tuning flavor profiles

Adjust MySweet 40K The Candy Dial Smoother

Our Testing Experience

MySweet is the device I used when a flavor felt too sharp. The sweetness control can round edges. That changes the draw texture more than expected. Lower sweetness keeps flavors crisp. Higher sweetness makes them feel thicker and softer.

Jamal loved this one for quick pulls. He used it between errands. He also used it after workouts. The device felt comfortable. “This is my easy button.” He stayed on low to mid sweetness. Under those settings, it did not feel cloying.

Marcus tested it with longer sessions. High sweetness turned into a wall. Flavor felt heavy. Throat feel got more noticeable. “It starts tasting like syrup.” He backed down to mid sweetness and increased airflow. That improved his experience.

I tracked condensation. MySweet stayed stable. The mouthpiece still collected some moisture after pocket time. It was not a leak. It was the usual condensation pattern.

Draw Experience & Flavors

The draw feels smooth and slightly warm at normal power. Sweetness settings change perceived “thickness.” Low sweetness feels cleaner. Mid sweetness feels fuller. High sweetness can feel sticky, especially after repeated pulls.

Blue Razz B-Pop hit like candy blue raspberry. On low sweetness, it tastes sharper and more tart. Throat feel stays crisp. On mid sweetness, it becomes more like a melted candy note. High sweetness makes it dense, yet it can also blur the edges. Jamal preferred mid. He wanted candy without syrup.

Lemon Heads was a surprise. Low sweetness made it feel like straight lemon candy bite. The inhale felt bright. The throat feel tightened slightly. Mid sweetness added a sugary shell effect. High sweetness made it feel like lemon syrup. I liked it low to mid, depending on mood.

Raspberry Orange tasted layered. Raspberry sits behind the orange. Low sweetness kept citrus clean. Mid sweetness turned it into a candy chew. High sweetness made it feel heavy. Marcus stayed low. He wanted the citrus to cut through.

Triple Berry tasted darker and smoother. It felt less sharp than the candy names suggest. Low sweetness gave it a fresh berry note. Mid sweetness gave it a jam vibe. High sweetness made it thick. That thickness can feel satisfying for short pulls. Longer sessions made it tiring for me.

Watermelon Roll Ups leaned nostalgic. Low sweetness gave it a light melon candy. Mid sweetness gave it the “rolled candy” impression. High sweetness made it sticky and a little flat. Jamal liked mid. He called it “movie snack flavor.”

Wintergreen Savers had the cleanest throat feel. Low sweetness made wintergreen crisp and direct. Mid sweetness added a sweet mint shell. High sweetness made it feel almost creamy. Marcus liked low. He wanted the bite. I liked mid for daily carry since it stayed balanced.

Best draw experience came from Wintergreen Savers at mid sweetness. Lemon Heads at low sweetness came second. Those settings kept the inhale clean. They also avoided sugar fatigue.

Pros & Cons

Pros Cons
Sweetness control smooths harsh edges High sweetness can become cloying fast
Great for short sessions Candy profiles can fatigue taste over long sessions
Screen and controls are straightforward Not ideal for users who hate sweet finishes
Good flavor intensity at moderate settings Condensation still appears after pocket carry

Key Specs & Flavors

  • Price: commonly listed around 1322
  • Device type: rechargeable disposable
  • Nicotine strength: 5% salt nicotine listed on many retailer pages
  • Battery: 850 mAh listed
  • Charging: USB-C
  • Coil: triple mesh described on multiple listings
  • E-liquid capacity: 20 mL listed
  • Sweetness control: multi-level sweetness adjustment
  • Power modes: multiple modes described on listings
  • Display: sweetness, battery, e-liquid indicators
  • Flavors seen on listings: Blue Razz B-Pop, Lemon Heads, Raspberry Orange, Triple Berry, Watermelon Roll Ups, Wintergreen Savers

Review Score

Metric Score Remarks
Flavor 4.4 Strong candy clarity, best at low-mid sweetness
Throat Hit 4.2 Smooth in mid settings, heavier at high sweetness
Vapor Production 4.2 Satisfying output in normal use, not a cloud monster
Airflow/Draw 4.2 Smooth pull with simple tuning, no major whistle issues
Battery Life 4.3 Steady daily carry behavior, predictable screen guidance
Leak Resistance 4.2 Normal condensation, no frequent airflow seep patterns
Build Quality 4.3 Solid body, readable screen, comfortable mouthpiece
Ease of Use 4.5 Sweetness control feels intuitive, fast to understand
Portability 4.4 Pocket-friendly feel, low daily maintenance
Overall 4.3 Best for candy fans who want control over sweetness load

Adjust MySour 40K The Tang Toggle Specialist

Our Testing Experience

MySour exists for one reason. A sour bite changes how a flavor feels. The adjustment here did not feel like a gimmick. Low sour feels like a hint of tart. High sour feels like a real “pucker” effect in the inhale.

I used it during evening sessions. Sour flavors can feel intense in the morning. At night, they felt like a reset. I kept sourness in the middle range most days. That gave me a tang without fatigue.

Marcus ran it higher and longer. He wanted to see whether sour stays clean or turns harsh. The answer depended on the flavor. “High sour is fun, then it becomes work.” He also watched heat. The device stayed stable in normal use. Under heavier pulls, warmth rose, yet it stayed manageable.

Jamal treated it like a rotation piece. He used it when he wanted a change from sweet profiles. Pocket carry stayed fine. He did notice mouthpiece moisture after long walks. “It gets a little wet, not leaky.” That matched my notes.

Draw Experience & Flavors

The draw feels crisp. Sourness settings change how the throat feel lands. Low sour feels smooth. Mid sour feels sharp in a controlled way. High sour can feel scratchy for some users, especially during long sessions.

Sour Blue Razz Ice gave a candy-blue hit with a tart edge. Low sour tasted like blue candy with a slight pinch. Mid sour made it lively. High sour pushed a zing into the inhale that Marcus liked. He also admitted it fatigued him after repeated pulls. The ice finish helped clean the exhale.

Sour Grapple tasted like grape plus green apple vibes. Low sour made it fruit-forward. Mid sour made it feel like sour candy. High sour made it dominate the flavor. I preferred mid. Jamal preferred low. He wanted more fruit.

Sour Island leaned tropical. The sour note made pineapple-like edges feel sharper. Low sour felt smooth. Mid sour tasted like a sour tropical drink. High sour turned it into a strong tang bite. That bite can be enjoyable in short sessions. Longer sessions felt tiring for me.

Sour Pinkberry leaned mixed berry. The sour part made the inhale feel “snappy.” Low sour tasted like berry candy. Mid sour made it feel like sour belt candy. High sour flattened some berry detail, oddly enough. The sour took over.

Sour Peach Raspberry balanced soft peach and darker berry. Low sour kept it gentle. Mid sour made the peach feel brighter. High sour made the peach feel less real. It became candy. I liked mid. Marcus liked low since he wanted less bite.

Sour Peach Raspberry also revealed the best setting behavior. One step down on sour often improved smoothness without losing tang. “That’s the sweet spot,” Jamal said, then he kept it there.

Best draw experience came from Sour Peach Raspberry at mid sour. Sour Blue Razz Ice at mid sour came next, mainly for the crisp finish.

Pros & Cons

Pros Cons
Sourness control feels meaningful High sour can fatigue taste quickly
Crisp draw texture at mid settings Some flavors lose detail at max sour
Good rotation device for variety Not ideal for users who dislike tart bite
Screen helps manage sessions Condensation appears after pocket carry

Key Specs & Flavors

  • Price: commonly listed around 1320
  • Device type: rechargeable disposable
  • Nicotine strength: commonly listed as 5% salt nicotine
  • Battery: 850 mAh listed on multiple retailer pages
  • Charging: USB-C
  • Coil: triple mesh described on listings
  • E-liquid capacity: 20 mL listed
  • Sourness levels: multi-level sour adjustment
  • Power and airflow: adjustable airflow described
  • Display: battery and e-liquid indicators
  • Flavors seen on listings: Sour Blue Razz Ice, Sour Grapple, Sour Island, Sour Pinkberry, Sour Peach Raspberry

Review Score

Metric Score Remarks
Flavor 4.2 Best at mid sour, detail loss can appear at max sour
Throat Hit 4.0 Smooth at low settings, sharper at high sour levels
Vapor Production 4.1 Solid output, stays consistent in normal sessions
Airflow/Draw 4.1 Crisp draw feel, easy tuning with airflow control
Battery Life 4.1 Adequate for daily rotation, heavy use drains faster
Leak Resistance 4.1 Normal condensation behavior, no frequent seep issues
Build Quality 4.2 Solid shell feel, screen stays readable
Ease of Use 4.2 Sour control is simple, settings need personal tuning
Portability 4.0 Pocketable, yet sour profiles suit shorter sessions best
Overall 4.1 A strong niche pick for sour lovers who want control

Adjust MyRusher 40K The Mode Punch Heavyweight

Our Testing Experience

MyRusher is the “impact” device in this lineup. The three power modes matter. Normal feels balanced. Rush feels louder. Turbo feels like maximum output. That jump changes throat feel, vapor density, and heat.

Marcus treated this as his main device for the week. He used it during longer sessions and outdoors. Rush mode delivered the strongest “hit feel” for him. Turbo delivered more cloud, yet it also raised warmth quickly. “It rips, then it bakes.” He respected Turbo, but he did not live there.

Jamal used it less, mostly due to size and intensity. He still liked the screen and the tank visibility. He also liked the idea of picking a mode for the moment. “Normal is fine for the car.” He avoided Turbo in pocket carry days.

I ran it like a tool. Normal during work. Rush during evening. Turbo only for short bursts. That kept it enjoyable. It also kept heat within reason. The bigger battery helped. I saw fewer dead-device surprises.

Draw Experience & Flavors

The draw on MyRusher feels more open than the others. It leans toward a stronger restricted-lung pull. Power modes change airflow feel too. Higher output makes the draw feel “fatter” in the mouth. It also makes flavors feel louder.

Watermelon Ice tasted clean and bright. Normal mode gave a smooth inhale. The exhale felt icy but not harsh. Rush mode made the watermelon pop. Turbo made it colder and louder. Turbo also made it sharper on repeated pulls. Jamal liked Normal. Marcus liked Rush.

Blue Razz Ice hit like candy with chill. Normal mode felt balanced. Rush mode made it punchy. Turbo mode made it intense and slightly rough over time. “Turbo turns it into a throat punch,” Marcus said, then he backed down.

Georgia Peach tasted soft and warm. Normal mode made it feel mellow. Rush made it brighter and sweeter. Turbo pushed it too far for me. The peach lost realism. It turned into candy peach. Normal was the best setting here.

Pomegranate Blast tasted dense. Normal mode already felt rich. Rush mode made it bold. Turbo mode made it heavy and warm. I used Turbo only for a couple pulls. Then I went back to Rush. The flavor stayed enjoyable there.

Strawberry Banana tasted creamy and thick. Normal mode made it smooth. Rush mode made it fuller. Turbo mode made it heavy and slightly cloying. Jamal liked Normal for short sessions. Marcus liked Rush for longer ones.

Winter Mint tasted sharp and clean. Normal mode felt like crisp mint. Rush made it colder and more forceful. Turbo turned it intense, yet also borderline harsh for repeated pulls. I preferred Rush for quick resets. Jamal preferred Normal.

Sour Strawberry Dragon brought a tart edge without needing a “sour control” dial. Normal mode felt balanced. Rush mode made the sour edge pop. Turbo mode made it too intense. Marcus called Rush the best match here.

Best draw experience came from Georgia Peach on Normal mode. Best “impact” experience came from Blue Razz Ice on Rush mode.

Pros & Cons

Pros Cons
Power modes create real performance changes Turbo can run hot during heavy sessions
Bigger battery supports heavy users Intensity can overwhelm light users
Strong vapor in Rush and Turbo Some flavors lose nuance at max output
Tank visibility reduces guesswork Slightly bulkier for pocket carry

Key Specs & Flavors

  • Price: commonly listed around 1725
  • Device type: rechargeable disposable
  • Nicotine strength: commonly listed as 5% salt nicotine
  • Activation: draw-activated
  • Battery: commonly listed as 1000 mAh
  • Charging: USB-C
  • E-liquid: commonly listed as 20 mL
  • Coil: dual mesh described on listings
  • Power modes: Normal, Rush, Turbo described on retailer pages
  • Airflow: adjustable airflow described
  • Display: mode and battery indicators
  • Flavor options seen on listings: Blue Razz Ice, Georgia Peach, Mountain Berry, Pineapple Paradise, Pomegranate Blast, Sour Fcuking Fab, Sour Strawberry Dragon, Strawberry Banana, Watermelon Ice, Winter Mint

Review Score

Metric Score Remarks
Flavor 4.4 Strong flavor delivery, best clarity in Normal and Rush
Throat Hit 4.6 Rush gives strong impact, Turbo can get harsh for some
Vapor Production 4.7 Dense output, especially in Turbo for short bursts
Airflow/Draw 4.4 Open restricted draw, stable across modes
Battery Life 4.7 1000 mAh class battery suits heavy use patterns well
Leak Resistance 4.3 Condensation manageable, watch pocket heat days
Build Quality 4.5 Solid feel, useful tank visibility and screen
Ease of Use 4.4 Modes are simple, yet discipline matters for comfort
Portability 4.1 Carryable, though bulk and intensity reduce “easy carry” appeal
Overall 4.5 Best for impact seekers who want mode control and battery headroom

Compare Performance Scores of These Vapes

Device Overall Score Flavor Throat Hit Vapor Production Airflow/Draw Battery Life Leak Resistance Build Quality/Durability Ease of Use
MyCool 40K 4.4 4.4 4.3 4.2 4.3 4.3 4.2 4.4 4.5
MyFlavor 40K 4.2 4.4 4.1 4.2 4.2 4.1 4.1 4.3 3.9
MySweet 40K 4.3 4.4 4.2 4.2 4.2 4.3 4.2 4.3 4.5
MySour 40K 4.1 4.2 4.0 4.1 4.1 4.1 4.1 4.2 4.2
MyRusher 40K 4.5 4.4 4.6 4.7 4.4 4.7 4.3 4.5 4.4

The most balanced device landed as MyCool. It avoids extreme behavior. MyRusher acts like a specialist for impact and output. MyFlavor acts like a specialist for variety. MySweet covers the “smooth candy” lane. MySour stays niche, yet it stays fun in rotation.

Best Picks

  • Best adjust vape for all-day carry
    Winner: Adjust MyCool 40K
    The score stays high across categories. Jamal’s carry notes stayed positive. The coolness dial let me keep draws comfortable.

  • Best adjust vape for heavy users who want punch
    Winner: Adjust MyRusher 40K
    Throat hit and vapor scores lead the chart. Marcus kept returning to Rush mode. The 1000 mAh class battery fit heavy patterns.

  • Best adjust vape for flavor tinkerers
    Winner: Adjust MyFlavor 40K
    Flavor score stays high. The ratio control keeps it interesting. It rewarded careful tuning during slower sessions.

How to Choose the adjust vape Vape?

Device type comes first. These are rechargeable disposables. Maintenance stays low. The real choice becomes control style. Ice control fits menthol users. Sweet control fits candy users. Sour control fits tart fans. Power modes fit impact seekers. Dual flavor fits people who get bored fast.

Vaping style matters in feel. These devices lean restricted-lung for many users. Mouth-to-lung purists may find them a bit open. Direct-lung cloud chasers may want true high-wattage setups instead.

Nicotine tolerance affects comfort. Stronger settings can feel harsh. Lower settings can feel too soft for former heavy smokers. Personal preference rules here. No one setting fits every adult user.

For a light nicotine user who wants something simple, MyCool on low coolness fits. MySweet on low sweetness fits too. Jamal’s notes matched that pattern.

For a former heavy smoker who wants a stronger throat feel, MyRusher fits best. Rush mode delivered impact. Marcus stayed there most days.

For a flavor-focused user, MyFlavor fits. Solo mode keeps flavors clean. Blend mode creates novelty when boredom hits.

For a commuter who needs predictability, MyCool or MySweet fits better than MyFlavor. The controls feel simple. The screens prevent surprises.

For a beginner who wants low fuss, MySweet stays easiest. Sweetness adjustment feels intuitive. MyCool also stays simple if menthol feels comfortable.

Budget matters too. Listings vary widely. A sale price can change the whole value story. Keep that in mind before buying multiple units.

Limitations

Adjust Vape targets a narrow lane. These devices do not cover rebuildable users. They also do not cover advanced mod users who want full coil choice.

High-output cloud chasers will hit limits fast. MyRusher gets closest, yet it still behaves like a disposable platform. Turbo adds intensity. It does not turn it into a true high-wattage rig.

Users who hate sweet profiles will struggle with parts of the lineup. Many flavors lean candy. Sweetness control can also push flavors into syrup territory. That can feel unpleasant for some adults.

People who want a tight cigarette-like draw may not love these. The draw leans restricted-lung for many users. A tight mouth-to-lung feel may require another category.

Ultra-budget shoppers may also feel underserved. Sale prices exist. Regular listings often sit in mid-range. The value becomes subjective at that point.

Very heavy all-day users can also hit practical limits. Battery size helps, especially on MyRusher. A disposable still carries the same daily charging reality. Condensation can also build during constant pocket carry.

Is the adjust vape Vape Lineup Worth It?

Adjust Vape sells control. In use, the controls do work. The coolness dial changes the entire draw. Sweetness changes texture. Sourness changes bite. MyRusher modes change impact.

Daily use revealed a second truth. More intensity brings trade-offs. Throat feel can sharpen. Heat can rise. Some flavors lose detail. That pattern showed up most on max settings.

MyCool offered the safest day-to-day behavior in our notes. The draw stayed steady. The screen prevented dead surprises. Jamal carried it without drama. That matters for real adult routines.

MyRusher delivered the strongest performance ceiling. Vapor got dense fast. Rush mode felt like the best balance. Marcus stayed there. Battery life also stayed strong, based on carry patterns and screen checks. Many listings describe a 1000 mAh battery class. That matched the heavy-use intent.

MyFlavor delivered the most novelty. Dual flavor ratios kept it interesting. The trade-off was mental load. It asked for attention. Jamal did not want that during commuting. I used it more during slower breaks.

MySweet delivered comfort when candy flavors got harsh. Sweetness control helped smooth edges. High sweetness could feel sticky. Mid settings stayed best. That is where the value sits.

MySour delivered a niche thrill. Sour control worked. It also tired the palate faster at high settings. It makes sense as a rotation device, not a single daily driver.

Pricing is the final lever. Many listings cluster around the high teens to low twenties. Sale prices can drop lower. When the price sits low, value looks strong. When the price climbs, the lineup competes with many other 40K-style disposables.

Worth it depends on the adult user type. A commuter who values predictability gets value from MyCool or MySweet. A heavy user chasing punch gets value from MyRusher. A bored flavor chaser gets value from MyFlavor. A sour fan gets value from MySour, mainly as a change-up.

Pro Tips for adjust vape Vape

  • Keep settings moderate during long sessions, then raise them for short bursts.
  • Store the device upright between sessions to reduce mouthpiece moisture.
  • Wipe the mouthpiece after pocket carry days, especially in cold weather.
  • Use Normal modes during commuting, then switch to stronger modes later.
  • Recharge before the battery hits the last bar, since output can feel weaker.
  • Avoid leaving the device in a hot car, since heat can worsen condensation.
  • If a flavor feels harsh, lower the intensity control before switching flavors.
  • Rotate flavor profiles across the day to reduce taste fatigue.
  • Keep airflow a bit more open when using higher intensity settings.

FAQs

How long does an Adjust Vape 40K device last in real use
Puff claims vary by user behavior. Short draws stretch lifespan. Long pulls shrink it. Marcus burned through faster than Jamal. Settings also matter, since higher modes use more power and liquid.

How often do these devices need charging
Daily charging showed up for heavy use. Marcus often topped up nightly on MyRusher. Jamal sometimes went longer. Screen indicators made planning easier.

Do the adjustable settings really change the experience
Yes. Ice, sweet, and sour controls change throat feel and flavor perception. MyRusher modes change output. Those changes are not subtle.

Do these devices leak
We saw condensation more than leaks. Pocket carry produced mouthpiece moisture. Upright storage reduced it. None of our devices showed constant seep issues, yet habits matter.

How consistent is flavor over time
MyCool and MySweet stayed most stable at moderate settings. MyFlavor stayed stable in solo modes. High intensity settings can flatten nuance over time, especially on candy-heavy blends.

How do I pick a nicotine strength with these devices
Many listings describe 5% salt nicotine for this lineup. Adults with lower tolerance often prefer fewer sessions rather than chasing higher intensity settings. No dosing advice belongs here. Personal tolerance varies widely.

Are disposables or refillables better for maintenance
These are rechargeable disposables. Maintenance stays minimal. Refillable pod systems offer more control over e-liquid choice, yet they require ongoing purchases and cleaning habits.

Which model fits a pocket carry lifestyle best
MyCool and MySweet carried easiest in Jamal’s routine. MyRusher carried fine, yet it felt bulkier. MyFlavor carried fine, yet it rewarded slower use.

Which model fits heavy sessions best
MyRusher handled heavy sessions best. Rush mode stayed the sweet spot in Marcus’s notes. Turbo delivered output, yet warmth rose faster.

Sources

  • National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. Public Health Consequences of E-Cigarettes. National Library of Medicine. 2018. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK507171/
  • U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. E-Cigarette Use Among Youth and Young Adults A Report of the Surgeon General. National Library of Medicine. 2016. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK538680/
  • World Health Organization. Regulation of e-cigarettes Tobacco factsheet. 2024. https://www.who.int/docs/librariesprovider2/default-document-library/10-regulation-of-e-cigarettes-tobacco-factsheet-2024.pdf
  • Gordon T, Karey E, Rebuli ME, et al. E-Cigarette Toxicology. National Library of Medicine. 2021. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9386787/
  • Benowitz NL. Nicotine Addiction. National Library of Medicine. 2010. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2928221/
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.