
Vape accessories
by Arizer
The Arizer whip mouthpiece is a borosilicate glass replacement part that slots into any tubing with a 7mm internal diameter, restoring your whip vaporiser setup to factory condition. This is an original Arizer manufacturer part — not a third-party knock-off — so the fit, the glass thickness, and the vapour path are exactly what your device was designed around. If your current mouthpiece has a chip, a crack, or has gone cloudy from resin build-up that no amount of isopropyl can shift, this is the straightforward fix.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Material | Borosilicate glass |
| Tubing compatibility | 7mm internal diameter |
| Manufacturer | Arizer (Canada) |
| Part type | Original replacement part |
| SKU | VS0104 |
| Compatible devices | Arizer V-Tower, Extreme Q, XQ2, and other whip-style vaporisers using 7mm tubing |
Complete your whip setup: if the tubing itself is looking tired, grab a fresh length of silicone whip tubing alongside this mouthpiece. Already running an Arizer Extreme Q or XQ2? A spare glass cyclone bowl and a set of replacement screens keep your entire vapour path clean and efficient.
Glass mouthpieces take a beating. They're the part you hold between your teeth, the part that clinks against the table, the part that rolls off the sofa arm at exactly the wrong angle. One small chip on the lip and you're either risking a cut or tasting something off every session. We've seen plenty of customers try to nurse a cracked mouthpiece along with electrical tape or silicone sleeves — it works for about a week before the seal goes and you're pulling air from everywhere except the whip.
The other reason to swap: resin. Borosilicate glass is non-porous, which means residue sits on the surface rather than soaking in. That's good news for cleaning. But if you've let it build up over months, the bore narrows and draw resistance climbs. A fresh mouthpiece with a clean 7mm channel feels noticeably more open. You'll draw less hard and get smoother, cooler vapour as a result — something that matters given that, according to research published in the Canadian Journal of Respiratory Therapy, regular vapouriser users report strong intuitions about reduced respiratory irritation compared to combustion methods (PMC4456813).
One honest note: this is a small glass tube. It's not going to transform your vaporiser experience on its own. But a damaged or gunked-up mouthpiece absolutely degrades it, and at this price point there's no reason to put up with that. Keep a spare in the drawer. You'll use it sooner than you think.
The best maintenance tip for any glass vapouriser part is simple: don't let residue cure. After each session, while the glass is still slightly warm, run a dry pipe cleaner through the bore. Takes five seconds. Do this and you'll go weeks between deep cleans.
For a proper clean, drop the mouthpiece into a zip-lock bag with isopropyl alcohol (90% or higher) and a pinch of coarse salt. Shake gently for 30-60 seconds, then rinse under warm water. The salt acts as a mild abrasive without scratching borosilicate glass. Avoid sudden temperature changes — don't run cold water over a hot mouthpiece, or you risk thermal shock cracking the glass. That's the number one way we see people break these.
| Cleaning Method | Frequency | Time Required |
|---|---|---|
| Dry pipe cleaner through bore | After every session | 5 seconds |
| Isopropyl alcohol soak (90%+) | Every 1-2 weeks | 10-15 minutes |
| Salt + isopropyl shake | Monthly deep clean | 2-3 minutes active |
| Warm water rinse | After every alcohol clean | 30 seconds |
We've sold Arizer parts since the V-Tower was the desktop vaporiser to own, and the whip mouthpiece is one of those bits people forget about until it's too late. It's glass. It breaks. The trick is having a replacement already in your kit rather than discovering you need one at 10pm on a Saturday. At this price, buying two makes more sense than buying one — the second sits in the drawer until the first meets the kitchen floor.
One thing worth mentioning: the fit on this mouthpiece is tight and precise because it's an original Arizer part. We've handled third-party glass mouthpieces that look identical but sit loose in the tubing or have a slightly wider bore that changes the draw resistance. If you're running an Arizer device, stick with Arizer glass. The Extreme Q and XQ2 in particular are tuned around specific airflow characteristics — a study using the Arizer Solo II for aerosol research noted the device was preheated to 200°C with specific chamber configurations (PMC12361559), which shows how precisely these devices are engineered. The mouthpiece is part of that system, not just a tube you breathe through.
Any whip-style vaporiser that uses tubing with a 7mm internal diameter. That includes the Arizer V-Tower, Extreme Q, and XQ2 out of the box. Other desktop vaporisers with 7mm ID whip tubing will also work — just check your tubing size before ordering.
Slow and steady wins. Draw gently for 5-10 seconds rather than pulling hard. The whip system relies on passive airflow — no fan needed. A relaxed, even draw produces cooler, denser vapour than a sharp inhale. Think of sipping through a straw, not sucking through one.
Replace it if you spot any chips or cracks on the lip — even hairline ones. Also replace if the bore has narrowed visibly from resin build-up that cleaning can't fully remove, or if the mouthpiece no longer seats firmly in your tubing.
This is the whip mouthpiece, designed for the whip tubing assembly. The XQ2 uses a separate frosted glass balloon mouthpiece for its balloon system. If you need the balloon part, look for the Arizer frosted glass balloon mouthpiece specifically.
Yes, as long as the tubing has a 7mm internal diameter. Standard food-grade silicone tubing in 7mm ID works fine. Avoid PVC tubing that isn't rated for heat — silicone is the safer bet for vapour paths.
Borosilicate is the same glass used in lab equipment — it handles heat well and resists thermal shock better than regular glass. That said, it's still glass. Drop it on tile and it will break. The walls on this mouthpiece are reasonably thick, but treat it like you'd treat any glass piece.
Last updated: April 2026