High-capacity disposables are getting smarter. Here’s the one everyone’s whispering about.
If you follow the disposable vape arms race (I do, somewhat obsessively), you’ve seen the move to gigantic puff counts, mesh coils, and now—tiny screens. The Aim FatMax 50000 Puff Disposable Vape is Shenzhen-born innovation with a practical twist: a smart LED that shows battery life and e-liquid level, plus a 0.6Ω mesh coil tuned for lung hits and that shisha-style body. It’s built for long-haul users and retailers who don’t want returns. Origin: No.1216, XinSha Road, Shajing Street, BaoAn Shenzhen.
Why it matters now
Industry trend, in plain words: fewer refills, clearer info, and compliance-ready builds. Screens reduce “guesswork,” mesh coils cut dry hits, and large reservoirs (around 30 mL) are displacing legacy 10–15 mL formats. Many customers say they simply want a disposable that “just lasts” without surprise drop-offs. That’s where Aim FatMax 50000 Puff Disposable Vape is positioned.
Core specifications (field notes)
| Model | Aim FatMax 50000 Puff Disposable Vape |
|---|---|
| Puff capacity | Up to 50,000 puffs (real-world use may vary) |
| Nicotine levels | 0% (nicotine-free), 2%, 3%, 5% |
| E-liquid | 30 mL prefilled |
| Size | 127 × 38 mm |
| Coil | 0.6Ω mesh coil |
| Battery | 800 mAh rechargeable, pure cobalt chemistry |
| Smart LED | Battery life + e-liquid capacity display |
| Vape style | Lung vaping; shisha-like density |
Process flow and QA (what I looked for)
Materials and methods, briefly: automated e-liquid filling, coil burn-in to stabilize resistance, ultrasonic sealing, and 100% visual + weight checks on filled units. Battery lots typically undergo UN38.3 transport testing and IEC 62133-2 safety evaluation before assembly. Post-build, sample units run puff-automation tests (airflow ≈ 15–25 L/h) and screen/battery readout verification. Service life is essentially “until liquid is depleted”—with rechargeable cycles intended to stretch the 30 mL capacity; cycle longevity depends on usage patterns.
Where it fits
- Travel retail and convenience chains seeking fewer restocks.
- Lounge-style users wanting dense, shisha-leaning vapor with a lung draw.
- Nicotine-free zones (0%) for flavor-centric, adult-only venues.
Advantages I noticed
- Clarity: the LED takes guesswork out of “how much is left.”
- Consistency: 0.6Ω mesh keeps flavor stable over long sessions.
- Range: 0/2/3/5% strengths cover different compliance markets.
Vendor comparison (indicative)
| Model | Aim FatMax 50000 Puff Disposable Vape | Vendor A “30K” | Vendor B “20K” |
|---|---|---|---|
| Puffs | ≈50k | ≈30k | ≈20k |
| E-liquid | 30 mL | 18–20 mL | 10–12 mL |
| Screen | Battery + liquid | Battery only or none | None |
| Coil | 0.6Ω mesh | Mesh (varies) | Wire/mesh (varies) |
Customization and packaging
White-label options typically include flavor SKUs, nicotine strengths (0/2/3/5%), colorways, barcoding, and regulatory marks per market. Retailers often request ship-ready master cartons and QR-based authenticity labels. Aim FatMax 50000 Puff Disposable Vape is usually offered with those basics; ask for COA, MSDS, and conformity docs alongside TPD registrations where applicable.
Mini case notes
- Convenience chain (SEA): switched to Aim FatMax 50000 Puff Disposable Vape; reported fewer “dead-on-arrival” complaints and longer refill cycles, to be honest.
- Hookah lounge (EU, 0%): chose the shisha-like draw; patrons liked the screen readout—surprisingly a conversation starter.
Compliance callouts
Look for UN38.3 and IEC 62133-2 on the cell, plus CE, RoHS, and REACH declarations for the device/materials. For EU nicotine SKUs, TPD registration is mandatory; non-nicotine SKUs still need labeling discipline. Ask vendors for ISO 9001 quality certification. Adult use only, 21+ (or local legal age).
Bottom line: if you want a long-run disposable with fewer surprises, Aim FatMax 50000 Puff Disposable Vape is squarely in that sweet spot—big tank, sensible coil, and a simple screen that actually helps.
References
- UN Manual of Tests and Criteria, Part III, Subsection 38.3 (UN38.3) – Lithium battery transport testing.
- IEC 62133-2:2017 – Safety requirements for portable sealed secondary lithium cells and batteries.
- Directive 2011/65/EU (RoHS) – Restriction of hazardous substances in electrical/electronic equipment.
- EU Tobacco Products Directive (2014/40/EU) – E-cigarette and refill container requirements.
- ISO 9001:2015 – Quality management systems, manufacturing and process control.
Post time:Nov - 06 - 2025
