Pros
- Pure convection for clean-tasting vapor.
- 4 presets (180–210 °C) + boost to 225 °C.
- Dual-use: herbs and concentrates (wax canister).
- 2300 mAh battery, USB-C with pass-through.
- Large 0.3 g chamber, zirconia mouthpiece.
Cons
- No water pipe option.
- LED instead of display — need to memorize colors.
- Narrow temperature range (180–225 °C).
Price Comparison (22 shops)
Last updated: 03/03/2026, 2:38 AM
Specifications
| Heating Method | Convection |
| Device Type | Portable |
| Power Source | Battery |
| Temperature Range | 180°C - 225°C |
| Heat-up Time | 45 seconds |
| Battery Capacity | 2300 mAh |
| Weight | 179 g |
| Warranty | 2 years |
| Dosing Capsules | View dosing capsules |
| Session Mode | Session |
| Temperature Control | Presets |
| Material | Dry Herb & Concentrates |
| Vapor Path | Ceramic |
| Battery Type | Internal |
| Replaceable Battery | No |
| Passthrough Charging | Yes |
| Charging Port | usb-c |
Source: OfficialOfficial, TVapeRetailer · Verified 19.02.2026
The Utillian 723 is a pure convection portable vaporizer in the mid-range price bracket. That alone is noteworthy — most portables under 170 EUR use conduction or hybrid heating because it is cheaper to manufacture. Utillian (the house brand of Canadian retailer TVape) delivers a device with a ceramic chamber, OLED display, and a borosilicate glass mouthpiece. Four temperature presets from 180 to 225 °C, a 2600 mAh battery, and USB-C charging round out the specs.
In practice, the 723 sits between budget portables and established mid-range units like the Arizer Solo 3. It offers features you rarely find at this price, but also has trade-offs — the lack of fully adjustable temperature control being the most obvious. Check current prices from 17 European shops in our price comparison. More devices from the brand on the Utillian overview.
See also: Utillian 8 · Utillian 2 · Utillian 722 · Utillian 50
Pure Convection at a Mid-Range Price
Convection means hot air flows through the herb rather than heating it through contact with a hot wall. The result is typically a cleaner-tasting vapor with fewer toasted notes. That said, "convection" gets used loosely in marketing — the ceramic chamber of the 723 inevitably heats up during warm-up, and herb touching the walls does get some contact heat.
Still, airflow is the primary heating mechanism here, and you can taste it. At lower temperatures (180–195 °C) the vapor tastes noticeably cleaner than what you get from conduction devices in the same price range. At 225 °C the difference narrows as the chamber walls radiate more heat.
The trade-off with convection: heat-up time. 30 to 40 seconds is noticeably longer than the 15–20 seconds a hybrid heater like the Boundless CFX needs. If you want instant vapor, you will notice. If you prioritize flavor, the wait is worth it.
OLED Display and Four Temperature Presets
The OLED display shows the current temperature in real time — no guesswork like with LED color-coded devices. Four presets are available:
- 180 °C (356 °F) — Terpene-forward, light vapor, full flavor. Great for the start of a session.
- 195 °C (383 °F) — Balanced mix of flavor and vapor density. The all-purpose setting.
- 210 °C (410 °F) — More vapor volume, slightly harsher taste. Good for the second half of a bowl.
- 225 °C (437 °F) — Maximum extraction. Thick clouds but flavor suffers. For the last draws or when clouds matter more than taste.
What is missing: fully adjustable temperature. Devices like the Arizer Solo 3 let you set any degree you want. With the 723, you are locked to four presets. For most people that is fine — but if you like dialing in exactly 188 °C or 203 °C, you will feel limited.
Sessions end automatically after 5 minutes. Standard for the category and enough for 10–15 draws.
Glass Mouthpiece and Vapor Quality
The 723 uses a borosilicate glass mouthpiece — the same heat-resistant glass found in lab equipment and Arizer stems. Flavor-wise, this is a clear advantage: glass is taste-neutral and does not impart the off-flavors you sometimes get from plastic or silicone mouthpieces.
The mouthpiece is removable and easy to clean — soak in isopropyl alcohol, rinse, done. Replacements are available from TVape for a few euros.
The downside: glass breaks. If you use the 723 on the go, remove the mouthpiece during transport. A silicone sleeve or carrying case would help — but neither is included.
The combination of convection heating and glass mouthpiece delivers clean, flavorful vapor that punches above its price class. Not on the level of a Tinymight 2 or Firewood 8 — but clearly better than most conduction portables under 150 EUR.
Battery and Daily Use
The built-in 2600 mAh battery lasts for roughly 6–8 sessions of 5 minutes each — depending on temperature. That is decent for a device this size and covers a normal day of use. Heavy users will get through the afternoon but maybe not the entire day.
Charging is via USB-C, which should be standard by now but still is not on many vaporizers. Full charge takes about 90 minutes. Passthrough charging works — you can use the 723 while it is plugged in. Handy when the battery dies and you do not want to wait.
At 150 grams, the 723 is not the lightest portable around. For comparison: an XMAX V3 Pro weighs 96 g, an Arizer Air SE about 100 g. You will notice it in a pants pocket. In a jacket or bag, not an issue.
The battery is not replaceable — no user-serviceable swap. With normal use, expect the capacity to hold up for 2–3 years before it drops noticeably.
Water Pipe Compatibility
With a WPA (Water Pipe Adapter), the Utillian 723 connects to any water pipe or bubbler. The adapter replaces the glass mouthpiece and fits standard 14 mm and 18 mm joints.
Water filtration makes the vapor cooler and more humid — especially noticeable at higher temperatures (210–225 °C). Convection vaporizers actually benefit from the increased draw resistance that water adds: more air through the chamber means more vapor production.
The WPA is not included and must be purchased separately. TVape sells compatible adapters. Make sure it is specifically listed for the 723 model — not all WPAs are universal.
Utillian 723 vs. the Competition
The 723 competes in a crowded segment. An honest look at the alternatives:
- Arizer Solo 3 (~170–200 EUR): Fully adjustable temperature, proven glass stem design, bigger battery (3500 mAh). But also more expensive and bulkier. If you have the budget, the Solo 3 gives you more control.
- Boundless CFX (~120–150 EUR): Hybrid heating, fully adjustable temp, large chamber. Faster heat-up (20 s) but denser, less clean-tasting vapor. No pure convection.
- XMAX V3 Pro (~80–100 EUR): Cheaper, lighter, adjustable temperature. But conduction-dominant with a plastic mouthpiece — less flavor.
- Flowermate V5 Nano (~90–130 EUR): Conduction, compact, beginner-friendly. Less vapor quality than the 723 but more ruggedly built.
A note on transparency: Utillian is the house brand of TVape — the same retailer that primarily sells the device. Independent reviews are therefore rarer than for Arizer or Boundless. That does not mean the device is bad — but most test coverage comes from TVape's own ecosystem.
Bottom line: for 100–170 EUR, the 723 delivers pure convection, a glass mouthpiece, and an OLED display. Few devices match that feature set at this price. If you need adjustable temperature or prefer an established manufacturer, the Solo 3 is the better pick.










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