Aim FatMax 50000 Puff Disposable Vape: field notes from the counter and the lab
I spent a week with the Aim FatMax 50000 Puff Disposable Vape and, to be honest, it surprised me in ways large and small—mostly around endurance and that smart little screen. Below is the no-spin version: specs, testing data, comparisons, and a couple of real-world stories from buyers who put it through long shifts and late-night commutes.
What’s trending in disposables (and where this fits)
Mesh coils plus larger reservoirs are the industry’s two-horse race right now; add OLED/LED readouts and you’ve got the new normal. The Aim FatMax 50000 Puff Disposable Vape lands squarely there: high-capacity 30 mL, 0.6Ω mesh, and a battery/e-liquid screen so you don’t play charge roulette. Many customers say the “shisha-like” draw feels denser than typical disposables—likely the 0.6Ω mesh doing its thing.
Key specs at a glance
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Puff capacity | Up to 50,000 (≈ real-world varies by airflow/nic level) |
| E-liquid | 30 mL prefilled |
| Nicotine levels | 0% (nic-free), 2%, 3%, 5% (regional compliance may apply) |
| Coil | 0.6Ω mesh (±0.05Ω typical) |
| Battery | 800 mAh rechargeable, pure-cobalt cell; ≈300 cycles to 80% capacity |
| Size | 127 × 38 mm |
| Smart LED screen | Battery life + e-liquid level indicators |
| Draw style | Lung vaping, shisha-like density |
Materials, process, and testing
-
- Materials: food-grade PCTG reservoir, stainless steel chassis, organic-cotton wicking, pure-cobalt cell.
- Assembly methods: ultrasonic sealing, double O-ring chimney, precision-filled 30 mL tank.
- QA methods: 24h thermal soak (40°C), −10°C cold start, vacuum leak test, 1.0 m drop test (3 faces), 72h aging run at 0.6Ω.
- Standards referenced: UN38.3 transport tests for Li-ion; IEC 62133 for battery safety; RoHS/CE where applicable; ISO 9001 QMS at factory level.
- Service life: ≈ 50k puffs; in mixed use (3–5 s draws), testers averaged 9–14 days per fill capacity device cycle, depending on nic strength and airflow.
Where it’s being used
- Convenience retail and duty-free (less turnover, fewer charge anxiety calls).
- Festival/weekend travel (the screen saves guesswork).
- Lounge bars/hookah alternatives—seems that the denser plume scratches that itch.
Customer feedback and field data
“Battery readout keeps me from overcharging,” one kiosk owner told me; another noted fewer dry hits after day five compared with smaller disposables—likely the mesh/cotton pairing. My own meter showed coil resistance hovering 0.59–0.62Ω across three units. No visible seepage after 24h warm soak.
Vendor comparison (quick take)
| Model | Puffs | E-liquid | Coil | Screen | Battery | Nic options | Certs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aim FatMax 50000 Puff Disposable Vape | ≈50k | 30 mL | 0.6Ω mesh | Battery + e-liquid | 800 mAh, cobalt | 0/2/3/5% | UN38.3, IEC 62133, RoHS (claimed) |
| Competitor X 45000 | ≈45k | 25 mL | Mesh | Battery only | 750 mAh | 2/5% | UN38.3 |
| Competitor Y 20000 | ≈20k | 12–15 mL | Wire coil | No | 600 mAh | 2% | — |
Customization and OEM/ODM
Flavor map, nic strengths (0–5%), region-specific labeling, and screen UI icons can be tailored. Private tooling for finishes is possible with MOQs; to be candid, lead times swing 20–30 days depending on flavor approvals and UN38.3 batch testing.
Mini case study
A regional C-store chain rolled in 300 units of the Aim FatMax 50000 Puff Disposable Vape. Sell-through outpaced a 20k-puff line 1.7× over four weeks. Returns for “dead on arrival” were 0.6% (n=300), below the store’s 1% benchmark. Staff cited the screen as the single biggest reason for fewer support exchanges.
Compliance notes
For EU markets, 2% nicotine aligns with TPD cap; other regions allow 3%/5%—always verify local rules. Battery logistics require UN38.3; factories citing IEC 62133 for cell design and ISO 9001 for QMS is a good baseline to request on POs.
Origin: No.1216, XinSha Road, Shajing street, BaoAn Shenzhen. If you’re auditing, ask for batch UN38.3 reports and recent RoHS test slips; in fact, buyers increasingly do.
References
- UN Manual of Tests and Criteria, UN38.3 (Lithium Battery Transport)
- IEC 62133: Secondary cells and batteries containing alkaline or other non-acid electrolytes
- ISO 9001 Quality Management Systems
- EU RoHS Directive (Restriction of Hazardous Substances)
- EU Tobacco Products Directive (TPD) – Nicotine limits and labeling
Post time:Oct - 07 - 2025
