The Wireless One Hit Wonder V2 is the most complete wireless ball vape kit you can buy at mid-range pricing as of May 2026. Crossing Tech packs 280 ruby balls into a stainless steel chamber, pairs it with a PID controller and aluminum docking station, and ships everything needed to start extracting cannabis in one or two massive hits.
Ball vapes sit at the top of the dry herb vaporizer power hierarchy, and the cordless format frees your water pipe from cable clutter. The WOHW V2 delivers comparable extraction to setups costing 40-50% more, like the Universal Baller, making it the most accessible entry point to wireless ball vaping.
We tested the stainless steel V2 kit across several weeks of daily sessions. Here's what we found.
Everything you need except the water pipe
The full kit includes the stainless steel heating wand filled with 280 x 3 mm ruby balls, a 25 mm barrel heating coil, PID controller, aluminum docking station with mounting hardware, and the titanium Matrix bowl with both 14.4 mm and 18.8 mm glass adapters. Crossing Tech also includes a stainless steel herb scoop, cleaning brush, replacement mesh screens, and Viton O-rings.
The V2 kit also includes a 22 mm adapter ring that fits 22 mm heaters from other brands, plus Crossing Tech now sells a separate wired conversion adapter that locks the coil directly to the wand for sustained heat during longer sessions.
The one missing piece: a water pipe. You need a bubbler or bong with a 14 mm or 18 mm female joint to get started. Crossing Tech's own Chugga 2.0 bubbler pairs well with the WOHW V2 and is available as a discounted bundle from several authorized retailers.
The stainless steel build is functional, not polished

The WOHW V2 heater wand weighs approximately 500 g and measures 180 mm tall with a 60 mm diameter. The stainless steel body sits atop a beechwood handle that stays cool during use. The aluminum docking station doubles as a stand, coil housing, and accessory holder with cutouts for spare bowls and tools.
Build quality is where the WOHW V2 shows its price point. The individual components work well together, but the kit lacks the cohesion of pricier ball vapes. The rubber band system that secures the docking station to the PID feels improvised. The Matrix bowl's screen positioning benefits from user adjustment out of the box. These are functional trade-offs, not dealbreakers, and the ball vape community has embraced the tinker-friendly design.
The vapor path is the part that matters most, and it's spotless. Only stainless steel (or titanium in the alternate variant), ruby balls, and glass touch your vapor. Zero plastic, zero silicone, zero coatings in the airpath.










