
Vaporizers
by Storz & Bickel
We'll only email you about this product — no marketing.
The Volcano Classic is a convection desktop vaporizer that delivers consistent, flavourful vapour through a detachable balloon system — and it's been doing so since 2000. Designed and manufactured by Storz and Bickel in Tuttlingen, Germany — a town with over 600 years of surgical instrument manufacturing heritage — this is the device that put desktop vaporisation on the map. We've had one behind the counter since the early days, and the thing just refuses to die.
Three variants, same core performance. The difference is cosmetic and valve type:
| Variant | SKU | What's Different |
|---|---|---|
| Easy Valve | VS0081 | The standard silver unit with Easy Valve system — pre-assembled bags you replace when worn. No fuss, no setup. |
| Easy Valve (Onyx Edition) | VS0281 | Same internals, matte black finish. Looks sharper on a shelf. Same Easy Valve convenience. |
| Easy Valve (Gold Edition) | VS0214 | Limited 20th-anniversary edition with a 24-karat gold-plated hot air generator. Identical performance, collector's appeal. Once they're gone, they're gone. |
We'd pick the standard Easy Valve if you just want the best desktop vaporizer money can buy. Go Onyx if aesthetics matter to you. The Gold Edition is for the person who already owns everything.
The Volcano Classic costs more than most vaporizers you'll find anywhere. That's the honest truth, and we're not going to dance around it. But here's what 25 years of selling vaporizers has taught us: cheap desktop units come back. Volcanos don't.
The reason is engineering. Storz and Bickel use an aluminium heat exchanger block with a precision-calibrated analogue dial that holds temperature within 1.5°C of your setting. The heating element sits below the filling chamber, drawing air upward through your material by pure convection — no conduction plate touching your herbs, no hot spots, no uneven extraction. You set a temperature between 130°C and 230°C, wait about 3-5 minutes for the unit to reach operating temperature, and you're producing vapour that tastes clean from the first balloon to the last.
The balloon system itself is what makes the Volcano unique among desktop vaporizers. Instead of drawing from a whip or mouthpiece (like the Arizer Extreme Q, for example), you fill a food-grade plastic bag with vapour, detach it, and inhale at your own pace. No cord tethering you to the unit. Pass it around a room. Set it on a table. The vapour stays fresh in the bag for roughly 10 minutes before it starts to thin out and lose flavour.
And then there's the research angle. Storz and Bickel supplied Volcano units to university departments across Europe and the US, which helped establish the vaporizer as a legitimate medical and research device. According to a review published in PMC, data supporting the efficacy of pulmonary absorption are available from pure THC vaporised with the Volcano Medic (PMC4718604). A separate study in the Journal of Pain Research noted that vaporisation has the advantage of volatilising cannabinoids below the point of combustion, reducing exposure to harmful byproducts (PMC6757233). This isn't marketing fluff — the Volcano is genuinely used in clinical settings.
Pick up a Volcano Classic and you'll immediately notice the weight — about 1.8 kg of solid construction. The conical housing is injection-moulded thermoplastic with a stainless steel heating element inside. It feels dense, planted, and nothing like the lightweight plastic units that wobble on a desk. The analogue temperature dial has a satisfying click-detent feel, and the green/red indicator lights are simple and clear: red means heating, green means ready.
The filling chamber is generously sized — you can fit approximately 2 to 2.5 grams of dried material, though you don't need to fill it completely. A light pack of 0.3-0.5g works fine for solo sessions. The Easy Valve system uses pre-made bags with a built-in mouthpiece; when a bag gets cloudy or the valve stiffens, you swap it for a new one. No cleaning, no fiddling with replacement screens on the valve itself.
The honest limitation: the Volcano Classic heats up slower than the newer Hybrid model. You're looking at 3-5 minutes versus roughly 40 seconds for the Hybrid. And there's no app control, no digital display, no whip attachment option. It's analogue, single-function, and deliberate. If you want Bluetooth connectivity and a touchscreen, the Volcano Hybrid is the one to look at. But if you want the unit that's been running in coffee shops and research labs for two decades without needing a firmware update, this is it.
| Specification | Value |
|---|---|
| Manufacturer | Storz and Bickel (Tuttlingen, Germany) |
| Heating method | Convection (hot air) |
| Temperature range | 130°C to 230°C (analogue dial) |
| Temperature accuracy | Within 1.5°C |
| Heat-up time | Approximately 3-5 minutes |
| Vapour delivery | Balloon bag (Easy Valve system) |
| Filling chamber capacity | Up to approximately 2-2.5g (loose pack) |
| Power | Mains powered (240V) |
| Weight | Approximately 1.8 kg |
| Dimensions (base unit) | Approximately 18 cm height x 20 cm diameter |
| Compatible materials | Dry herbs and extracts (with liquid pad) |
| Warranty | 3 years (Storz and Bickel manufacturer warranty) |
Complete your Volcano setup: grab an Easy Valve Replacement Set to keep spare bags on hand — you'll go through them faster than you think during group sessions. The Storz and Bickel Dosing Capsule Magazine is also worth picking up if you want pre-loaded, mess-free chamber fills. And if you're curious about the whip-and-app experience, compare with the Volcano Hybrid before you decide.
Storz and Bickel don't skimp on the unboxing. The Volcano Classic ships with everything you need to start a session immediately:
The included herb mill is functional but basic. If you're serious about an even grind — and you should be, because grind consistency directly affects extraction quality — pick up a dedicated metal grinder separately.
We get asked this constantly. Here's the short version: the Classic is the reliable, no-nonsense workhorse. The Hybrid is the feature-rich upgrade. Both produce outstanding vapour.
| Feature | Volcano Classic | Volcano Hybrid |
|---|---|---|
| Temperature control | Analogue dial (130-230°C) | Digital display with app control (40-230°C) |
| Heat-up time | 3-5 minutes | Approximately 40 seconds |
| Vapour delivery | Balloon only | Balloon and whip (tube) attachment |
| Connectivity | None | Bluetooth app (iOS/Android) |
| Build heritage | 20+ years on market | Released 2019 |
| Price | Lower | Higher |
If you value speed, precise digital control, and the option to use a whip attachment for direct draw, the Hybrid is the better pick. If you want the unit that's been battle-tested in research labs, restaurants, and living rooms for over two decades — and you prefer the simplicity of an analogue dial with no software to worry about — the Classic is still the one. We've seen Classics from the early 2000s still running daily. That's not an exaggeration.
Here's something most vaporizer descriptions won't tell you: the Volcano Classic has quietly made its way into professional kitchens, cocktail bars, and home cooking setups. Chefs use it to infuse dishes with aromatic vapour — think cedar wood, basil, rosemary, or lavender — adding a wisp of scented air to a plate or under a cloche. Bartenders fill balloons with herb-infused vapour and release them over cocktails for a dramatic, aromatic presentation. The precise temperature control means you can volatilise delicate aromatics without burning them, which is exactly what a convection vaporizer is designed to do.
Very. Turn it on, set the dial, grind your material, fill the chamber, press the pump button, and inhale from the bag. There's no app, no pairing, no learning curve. The analogue dial and two-button operation make it one of the simplest desktop vaporizers to operate straight out of the box.
If you're after a desktop vaporizer you'll still be using in 10 years, yes. The build quality, vapour consistency, and 3-year warranty justify the cost. We've seen cheaper desktop units fail within a year. Volcanos from the early 2000s are still in daily use. You're paying for longevity and German engineering, not a brand name.
Yes. Storz and Bickel include a liquid pad in the box specifically for this purpose. Place a small amount of concentrate on the pad, insert it into the filling chamber, and vaporise as normal. The pad prevents the extract from dripping into the heating element.
Depends on use. With daily sessions, expect to swap bags every few weeks. The bags gradually cloud up with residue and the valve can stiffen over time. Replacement sets are inexpensive and take seconds to swap — no tools needed.
During operation, yes — vapour has an aroma, though it dissipates much faster than smoke. Between sessions, the unit itself doesn't hold much odour. The filling chamber and screens can develop a residual scent if not cleaned regularly. A quick wipe with isopropyl alcohol sorts that out.
It's one of the best options available. The balloon system means you fill a bag, detach it, and pass it around — no one is tethered to the unit. You can fill multiple bags in sequence from a single chamber load. For groups of 3-5 people, load about 0.5-1g and fill 3-4 balloons.
Performance is identical. The Onyx Edition has a matte black finish instead of the standard silver. Same internals, same Easy Valve system, same 3-year warranty. It's purely a cosmetic choice.
Between 3 and 5 minutes from cold to operating temperature. That's slower than the Volcano Hybrid (around 40 seconds), but once it's at temperature, it holds steady within 1.5°C of your dial setting for as long as you leave it on.
Last updated: April 2026