
Water pipes & bongs
The Acrylic Bong Rasta Grip is a 32 cm acrylic water pipe with an ergonomic curved grip and bold red, yellow, and green Rasta stripes. Built from tough acrylic with a wide, stable base, it filters your smoke through water for a cooler, smoother draw — and it looks properly fun doing it. At this size and weight, it works just as well on a mate's coffee table as it does on yours.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Height | 32 cm |
| Material | Acrylic |
| Design | Curved ergonomic grip with Rasta stripes (red, yellow, green) |
| Base | Wide, flat bottom for stability |
| Bowl | Metal slide bowl (included) |
| Downstem | Metal downstem (included) |
| SKU | HS2729 |
Complete your setup with a decent grinder and some pipe screens. A set of brass screens keeps debris out of the water, and a metal grinder gives you an even, consistent pack every time. Both make a real difference to how cleanly this bong hits.
Acrylic bongs survive drops that would shatter glass on contact. That's the honest selling point here — if you're someone who smokes outdoors, brings a bong to a friend's place, or just has a talent for knocking things off tables, acrylic is the practical choice. We've seen customers come back for their third glass bong in a year. Acrylic solves that problem in one go.
The trade-off? Acrylic doesn't deliver quite the same flavour purity as borosilicate glass. Glass is inert, so you taste nothing but your herb. Acrylic can pick up a faint plasticky note over time, especially if you don't change the water regularly. That said, for the price of this piece, you're getting a reliable daily driver that handles life's little accidents without drama. If you want museum-piece glass, we carry those too — but this isn't that, and it doesn't pretend to be.
The Rasta Grip specifically adds one thing most cheap acrylic bongs skip: a genuinely comfortable hold. The curved midsection sits in your hand naturally. You're not clutching a straight tube and hoping for the best. After a few sessions, you notice the difference — especially if you're passing it around a group.
Pick it up and the first thing you notice is how light it is — noticeably lighter than even a small glass piece. The acrylic is smooth, slightly warm to the touch compared to cold glass, and the grip section has just enough curve that your fingers wrap around it without squeezing. The base is wide enough (roughly 8-9 cm across) that it sits flat on uneven surfaces without wobbling. The red, yellow, and green bands are moulded into the acrylic, not painted on, so they won't chip or peel after a few months of use. The metal downstem and bowl slot in with a snug fit — no rattling, no loose parts.
One honest note: the metal bowl that comes with it is functional but basic. It does the job, but if you want a bigger bowl or something with a handle for easier clearing, picking up a replacement bowl separately is a worthwhile upgrade down the line.
Acrylic is easier to maintain than glass, but it does need regular attention. The number one mistake we see is people leaving old bong water sitting for days. That water goes from slightly murky to genuinely foul within 48 hours, and the smell gets into the acrylic walls. Change it after every use — takes 30 seconds.
For a deeper clean, use warm (not boiling) water and a mild washing-up liquid. Acrylic can warp or crack under extreme heat, so never pour boiling water into it and never use a dishwasher. Avoid isopropyl alcohol or acetone-based cleaners — these dissolve acrylic. A bottle brush or pipe cleaner reaches the inside walls nicely. Rinse thoroughly, let it air dry, and you're sorted.
| Cleaning Task | Frequency |
|---|---|
| Change water | After every session |
| Rinse with warm water | Every 2-3 sessions |
| Wash with mild soap and brush | Weekly (with regular use) |
| Clean downstem and bowl | Weekly — soak in warm soapy water |
| Full deep clean | Monthly |
Yes. The water cools the smoke and traps heavier particulate matter and water-soluble compounds. It won't remove everything, but the hit is noticeably smoother and less harsh on your throat compared to a dry pipe or rolling paper.
Acrylic bongs are widely used and the material itself doesn't combust at the temperatures involved. The flame touches the metal bowl, not the acrylic. Just avoid pouring boiling water in or holding a lighter directly against the plastic body, and you're fine.
With basic care, years. Acrylic doesn't shatter from drops or knocks. The main thing that shortens its life is chemical damage from harsh cleaners like acetone or isopropyl alcohol. Stick to warm water and soap and it'll outlast most glass pieces simply by surviving daily life.
The tube is wide enough to drop a few ice cubes through the mouthpiece. They'll rest above the water and cool the smoke further on its way up. Just don't force oversized cubes — standard ice cube tray pieces fit without issue.
That's the water doing its job — catching ash, resin, and particulates from the smoke. Darker water means more filtration happened. Change it after every session for the cleanest taste and smoothest draw. Stale water defeats the purpose.
32 cm is a solid middle ground. It's tall enough to give the smoke proper cooling distance through the chamber, but compact enough to store in a cupboard or carry in a bag. For comparison, mini bongs sit around 15-20 cm and large pieces go 45 cm and up.
Yes. The metal bowl and downstem are removable. If you want a larger bowl or a different style, just match the downstem diameter when shopping for a replacement. Most standard metal bong bowls will fit.
Last updated: April 2026