
Dab rigs & tools
by Tsunami Glass
The Double Honeycomb Turbine Dab Rig 8″ is a borosilicate glass dab rig that stacks two honeycomb percolators for noticeably cooler, smoother hits than single-perc setups can manage. Standing at a compact 8 inches, this Tsunami Glass piece punches well above its weight — dual honeycomb discs break your vapour into hundreds of tiny bubbles, stripping heat and harshness before anything reaches your lips. It works with both dry herb and concentrates, which makes it a genuinely versatile bit of glass for the price.
| Variant | SKU | Vibe |
|---|---|---|
| Green | HS2186 | Classic, blends into any shelf |
| Blue | HS2185 | Stands out — the one most people grab first |
| Amber | HS2187 | Warm tone, hides residue slightly better between cleans |
All three colours share the same dimensions, joint size, and percolator setup. Pick whichever catches your eye — performance is identical across the board.
Here are the hard numbers. The Double Honeycomb Turbine Dab Rig keeps things straightforward — no gimmicks, just solid glass engineering where it counts.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Brand | Tsunami Glass |
| Height | 8 inches (approx. 20 cm) |
| Material | Borosilicate glass |
| Percolation | Dual honeycomb turbine percolators |
| Use | Dry herb and concentrates |
| Available colours | Green, Blue, Amber |
| Style | Straight tube |
Complete your dab setup with a quality torch lighter and a silicone dab mat to protect your table. If you're mainly using concentrates, a carb cap makes a real difference to vapour density — pair one with this rig and you'll get noticeably thicker, more flavourful draws.
Single-perc rigs do the job, but there's a ceiling to how much cooling one disc can provide. You end up with vapour that's still warm, slightly harsh on the throat, and missing some of the flavour nuance you'd get from a smoother draw. If you've ever coughed through a dab and thought "there has to be a better way" — there is, and it involves more holes.
The Double Honeycomb Turbine Dab Rig solves this by running your smoke through two stacked honeycomb discs. Each disc is covered in dozens of tiny holes that shatter your draw into a cloud of micro-bubbles. More bubbles means more surface area in contact with water, which means more heat stripped out and more particulate filtered. The turbine effect — that visible whirlpool action inside the tube — isn't just for show. It forces the smoke through an additional spin cycle of water contact before it reaches your mouth. The result: draws that taste cleaner and feel noticeably cooler than what you'd get from a basic single-perc rig.
At 8 inches, it's compact enough to store in a cupboard or tuck behind a monitor. We've seen people spend three times as much on rigs that don't filter half as well. The one honest downside: those honeycomb discs have a lot of small holes, and small holes clog faster than large ones. You'll want to rinse this rig with warm water after every session and give it a proper clean with isopropyl alcohol and coarse salt at least once a week. Skip that, and you'll notice the draw tightening up within a few days. It's not a design flaw — it's the trade-off you make for that level of filtration. Compared to something like a basic beaker bong with a downstem diffuser, the honeycomb setup demands a bit more maintenance, but the smoothness difference is night and day.
We've handled a lot of Tsunami Glass pieces over the years. They're not trying to be artisan — they're trying to be reliable, and they deliver on that. The borosilicate on this rig feels solid in the hand; it's got a decent weight to it without being clunky. The honeycomb discs are fused cleanly into the tube, no wonky edges or visible glue. You can hear the difference when you take a pull — that crackling, fizzy sound of hundreds of bubbles breaking through two percolator layers is genuinely satisfying. It sounds like sparkling water being poured, and it tells you the filtration is actually working.
The amber variant, if you're wondering, does hide water discolouration slightly better between cleans. It's a small thing, but if you're the type who forgets to rinse after a session, it buys you an extra day of looking presentable on your shelf. The blue is the most popular — it catches the light nicely and looks sharp when the water's swirling through those turbine discs.
A honeycomb perc is a flat glass disc covered in dozens of small holes. When you inhale, smoke is forced through these holes and broken into many tiny bubbles. More bubbles means more surface area touching the water, which cools and filters the smoke more effectively than a single large opening would.
Yes. The Double Honeycomb Turbine Dab Rig works with both. You'll need a standard bowl for dry herb and a banger or nail for concentrates — just swap them out on the joint as needed.
Rinse with warm water after every session. Do a full clean with 90%+ isopropyl alcohol and coarse salt once a week. Honeycomb percolators have many small holes that clog faster than simpler percs, so regular cleaning is non-negotiable if you want consistent airflow.
That slight resistance is the dual percolators doing their job — forcing smoke through dozens of tiny holes takes more effort than a wide-open downstem. If the drag feels excessive, check your water level (lower it slightly) and clean the discs. Clogged holes are the usual culprit.
Not at all. For concentrates especially, a shorter rig preserves flavour better because the vapour travels a shorter distance. At 8 inches with dual honeycomb percolators, you're getting filtration that rivals much taller pieces without losing terpene intensity.
A honeycomb perc is the flat disc with holes that breaks smoke into bubbles. The turbine effect refers to the spinning, whirlpool-like water motion created as those bubbles rise and interact. This rig combines both — the honeycomb discs create the bubbles, and the turbine action gives them extra water contact time.
No. Green, Blue, and Amber are purely cosmetic. Same glass thickness, same percolator setup, same joint size. Pick the colour you like — the smoking experience is identical.
Last updated: April 2026