Depends on many factors. What are you looking for? What kind of price are you looking at? How hard are you on your mods. Etc.
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I have no experience with the Tesla, but I can tell you from experience with the RX300 that it is large, not pocket friendly, and it is heavy. But battery life is great and I've had no performance issues until I installed the latest firmware update. That has to go.
Battlestar is a very good workhorse and is both durable and affordable. The Aegis is shockproof, waterproof, dustproof and mine works great. Haven't had any problems with it at all.
I second the Battlestar, especially if this will be your primary mod. What about the tank you will be using?
If you want a durable mod that will fit almost any type of vaping, I would suggest one that has the Evolv DNA chip in it. I have had very good luck with HCigar mods and currently own 3 of them. They have definitely been the most reliable and durable mods that I have had. You are going to get so many opinions from different folks and basically it just comes down to what you like. I would much rather pay a little more and get a good mod that replace mine regularly. I vape all day every day so I tend to go through cheap mods pretty quickly and have not had good luck with the Smok and Reuleax mods that a lot of people use. My current favorite is a HCigar VT Inbox with a Druga RDA. It has a DNA 75 Chip and is a squonker. The only complaint I have is battery life with only one 18650 but it's worth it to me to carry a couple extra 18650's with me if I am gonna be away from the house for a considerable length of time.
Thank you for the advice. Much appreciated.It depends... when I'm not on a mech I prefer either PWM (Pulse Width Modulation) or power curves. Power curves are where the RX300 really shines, thanks to ArcticFox firmware and thanks to being a 4-battery mod. I use the power curves only for preheat. Preheat uses extra wattage at the start of every puff so in order for the mod to be capable to sustain that extra power, it needs to be a 4-battery mod. That is, unless you don't vape at high wattage and or you don't mind having to recharge your batteries long before your batteries are getting close to running out. Not many people realize this, but you can't vape your batteries all the way down to 3.2 volts and expect to keep getting high power output. Essentially, the RX300 doesn't usually make a whole lot of sense unless you, like me, are a bit of an advanced vaper. Not that power curves in ArcticFox are rocket science. Just a lot of people seem to want to think it is... lol