
Arizer Glass Cyclone Bowl
Vape accessories
by Arizer
Arizer Glass Cyclone Bowl Replacement
The Arizer Glass Cyclone Bowl is a borosilicate glass chamber that sits atop your Arizer desktop vaporiser, directing hot air through your herb in a swirling cyclone pattern for even extraction. If your original bowl has cracked, clouded beyond cleaning, or taken a tumble off the desk, this is the exact manufacturer replacement — same 18mm glass-on-glass joints, same food-grade materials, same mesh screen included. No aftermarket guesswork.
Compatible Arizer Desktop Vaporisers
This cyclone bowl fits two Arizer desktop units — and only these two. No adapters needed, no modifications required.
| Vaporiser | Compatible? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Arizer Extreme Q | Yes | Direct drop-in replacement for the stock cyclone bowl |
| Arizer V-Tower | Yes | Identical 18mm fitting — same bowl across both models |
| Arizer Solo / Air / ArGo | No | Portable units use a different glass stem system |
Arizer Cyclone Bowl Specifications
Every dimension and material choice here matches the original part that shipped with your vaporiser. Arizer uses the same specs across production runs, so this slots in identically whether your unit is brand new or five years old.
| Spec | Detail |
|---|---|
| Joint Size | 18mm male/female (both ends) |
| Material | Borosilicate glass with food-grade black cylinder housing |
| Screen | Stainless steel mesh screen included |
| Housing | Cool-touch black cylinder — safe to handle during sessions |
| Manufacturer | Arizer (original OEM part) |
| SKU | VS0099 |
| Fits | Arizer Extreme Q, Arizer V-Tower |
Complete your desktop setup: if your elbow adapter is looking tired too, grab the Arizer Glass Elbow Adapter at the same time — it connects directly to this cyclone bowl via the top 18mm joint. And if you're running a whip setup, check the Arizer Extreme Q Balloon Kit for bag-style sessions without buying a second unit.
Why Replace Your Arizer Cyclone Bowl
Glass parts on desktop vaporisers are consumables. Not in the "they break every month" sense — borosilicate is tough — but over months and years of daily use, residue builds up in microscopic scratches, the screen warps from heat cycling, and one careless elbow sends the whole thing off the edge of your desk. We've seen it hundreds of times since we started stocking Arizer gear. The bowl hits the floor, the 18mm joint chips, and suddenly your seal is gone. Air leaks mean uneven heating, wasted herb, and wispy vapour that tastes like hot air instead of terpenes.
The honest limitation with any glass cyclone bowl: it's glass. There's no rubberised version, no silicone alternative that gives you the same clean flavour. Arizer specifically chose borosilicate and food-grade materials to keep the vapour path free from off-gassing or plastic taste. That's a genuine advantage over cheaper third-party bowls that use lower-grade glass or non-certified housings. The trade-off is that you treat it with a bit of respect, and you keep a spare on hand.
Compared to aftermarket cyclone bowls you'll find on various marketplace sites, the original Arizer part has tighter tolerances on the 18mm joints. We've handled both — the knockoffs tend to sit slightly loose, which means air leaks around the base. With the OEM bowl, you get that satisfying glass-on-glass friction fit where the bowl sits snug without wobbling. It's a small thing until you're halfway through a session and your bowl tilts sideways.
How to Install the Arizer Glass Cyclone Bowl
- Switch off your Arizer Extreme Q or V-Tower and let it cool completely. The heating element sits directly below the bowl — touching it while hot is a quick way to burn yourself.
- Gently twist and lift the old cyclone bowl straight upward to remove it from the heating element housing. If residue has sealed it in place, a slight rocking motion helps break the bond. Don't force it.
- Drop the included stainless steel mesh screen into the bottom of the new cyclone bowl. It should sit flat against the glass — no curling at the edges. The screen prevents herb from falling through into the heater.
- Place the new cyclone bowl onto the heating element, pressing down gently until the 18mm joint seats firmly. You should feel it lock into place with a light friction fit.
- Attach your elbow adapter or whip to the top 18mm joint of the cyclone bowl. Again, a gentle push and slight twist is all you need.
- Power on the vaporiser and set your temperature. The Extreme Q's digital display reads in 1-degree increments from 50°C to 260°C — most people land between 180°C and 210°C depending on the herb.
- Load your ground herb into the cyclone bowl through the top opening (with the elbow adapter removed). A medium grind works best — too fine and it clogs the mesh screen, too coarse and you get uneven extraction. About 0.2–0.3g fills the bowl nicely without packing it tight.
- Reattach the elbow adapter and begin your session. The cyclone airflow pattern pulls hot air through the herb in a spiral, which is why Arizer's desktop units extract so evenly compared to straight-tube designs.
How to Clean the Arizer Glass Cyclone Bowl
The cyclone bowl picks up residue fast — that amber-brown film on the glass walls is condensed vapour, and it builds up noticeably after 5–10 sessions.
- Remove the cyclone bowl from the vaporiser and let it cool to room temperature. Never drop cold glass into hot liquid or vice versa — thermal shock cracks borosilicate.
- Pop out the mesh screen with a toothpick or paperclip. Soak it separately in isopropyl alcohol (90% or higher) for 15–20 minutes.
- Submerge the glass bowl in isopropyl alcohol in a zip-lock bag or small container. Let it soak for 30 minutes to 2 hours depending on buildup. Stubborn residue needs longer.
- After soaking, use a pipe cleaner or cotton bud to scrub the inside walls and both 18mm joints. The joints are where residue affects performance most — any film there weakens the seal with the heater and elbow adapter.
- Rinse thoroughly under warm running water. No soap residue, no alcohol residue. Let it air dry completely before reinstalling.
- Replace the mesh screen once it's visibly warped, discoloured, or clogged even after cleaning. The included screen lasts a good while, but screens are cheap — swap them out every month or two if you're a daily user.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does the Arizer Glass Cyclone Bowl come with a screen?
Yes. A stainless steel mesh screen is included in the box. It sits in the bottom of the bowl and prevents ground herb from falling into the heating element. Replacement screens are sold separately if yours wears out.
Will this cyclone bowl fit the Arizer Solo or Arizer Air?
No. The Solo, Air, and ArGo portables use a completely different glass stem system. This cyclone bowl is designed exclusively for the Arizer Extreme Q and Arizer V-Tower desktop vaporisers — both use an 18mm joint connection.
How often should I replace the Arizer Cyclone Bowl?
There's no fixed schedule. If the glass is intact and the 18mm joints still form a snug seal, keep using it. Replace it when you see chips on the joint edges, cracks in the glass, or if residue has etched the interior so badly that cleaning no longer restores clarity.
Can I use the cyclone bowl with a balloon setup on the Extreme Q?
Yes. The balloon kit attaches to the elbow adapter, which connects to the top 18mm joint of the cyclone bowl. The bowl itself functions identically whether you're using whip mode, fan-assist, or balloon fills.
Is this an original Arizer part or a third-party replacement?
This is an original Arizer manufacturer part — same component that ships with new Extreme Q and V-Tower units. The food-grade materials and borosilicate glass match factory specifications exactly.
How much herb does the Arizer Cyclone Bowl hold?
Roughly 0.2–0.3g of medium-ground herb fills the bowl comfortably without packing. You can microdose with less — even 0.1g works if you don't pack it down. Overpacking restricts airflow and kills the cyclone effect.
Why does my cyclone bowl get stuck on the heating element?
Vapour residue builds up on the 18mm joint and acts like glue over time. Regular cleaning with isopropyl alcohol prevents this. If it's already stuck, gently rock the bowl side to side while pulling upward — never twist hard or you risk snapping the glass.
Last updated: April 2026










