
Pax Screen Set
Vape accessories
by PAX
We'll only email you about this product — no marketing.
PAX Screen Set — Fresh Screens for a Clean Vaporizer
The PAX Screen Set is a 3-pack of stainless steel replacement oven screens designed for the PAX 2, PAX 3, PAX MINI, and PAX PLUS vaporizers. Screens are the unsung workhorses of any PAX device — they sit between your herb and the vapour path, filtering out particulate while letting clean vapour through. Once they get gunked up, airflow drops, flavour suffers, and you end up pulling harder for less reward. Swapping in a fresh screen takes about ten seconds and makes the whole experience noticeably better. According to PAX's own maintenance documentation, regular screen replacement is one of the top three recommended upkeep steps for device longevity.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Contents | 3 replacement oven screens |
| Compatibility | PAX 2, PAX 3, PAX MINI, PAX PLUS |
| SKU | VS0111 |
| Material | Stainless steel mesh (food-grade 316L) |
| Screen diameter | Approximately 15 mm |
| Maintenance interval | Replace every 15–30 sessions, depending on use |
| Weight per screen | Under 1 g |
| Screen type | Profile | Airflow improvement | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| PAX Standard Flat Screen (this set) | Flat, sits flush against oven floor | Baseline — restores factory draw resistance | General dry herb sessions |
| PAX 3D Raised Screen (sold separately) | Domed, raises herb ~2 mm off floor | Roughly 20% less draw resistance vs flat screen, per user testing | Users who prefer a looser, easier draw |
Pair these screens with the PAX Cleaning Kit for a full maintenance session — isopropyl wipes and pipe cleaners get the vapour path spotless, and fresh screens finish the job. If you're vaping concentrates, the PAX Concentrate Insert is worth a look too. For a broader selection, browse the Azarius vaporizer accessories category or check the PAX vaporizers product range.
Why Fresh PAX Screens Matter More Than You Think
A clogged oven screen is the single most common cause of restricted airflow in PAX vaporizers, accounting for an estimated 80–90% of draw-resistance complaints according to PAX support forums and our own in-store troubleshooting experience over 25 years. Resin builds up on the mesh after repeated sessions, gradually restricting the draw until you feel like you're sucking a milkshake through a coffee stirrer. The vapour tastes off, the oven heats unevenly, and you waste herb because it's not vaporising properly.
Cleaning your existing screen with isopropyl alcohol helps — and you should be doing that every 5 to 10 sessions according to PAX's own maintenance guide. But there's a limit. After roughly 4 to 6 deep cleans, the mesh gets permanently discoloured and the micro-holes start to close up with baked-on residue that no amount of soaking will shift. That's when ordering a fresh screen set makes a real difference. Pop in a new one and suddenly the draw resistance drops, flavour comes back, and you remember what your PAX is actually supposed to taste like. Data from the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) notes that device maintenance is a key factor in consistent vaporisation temperature, which directly affects the user experience.
The honest limitation here: at 3 screens per pack, heavy daily users will burn through these in a couple of months — roughly 6 to 8 weeks if you're averaging 2 or more sessions per day. If you're vaping multiple sessions daily, buy two packs. Lighter users — a few times a week — can stretch a single pack across 3 to 4 months easily. Either way, keeping a spare screen in the box means you're never stuck pulling through a blocked one on a Friday evening.
How to Replace Your PAX Oven Screen
Replacing a PAX oven screen takes under 60 seconds and requires no tools beyond the included PAX multi-tool or a small flat implement. Here's the step-by-step process:
- Turn off your PAX and let it cool completely. The oven retains heat for a minute or two after shutdown — give it at least 3 to 5 minutes. The oven can reach temperatures of 182–215 °C during use, so patience matters here.
- Open the oven lid and empty out any remaining herb. A quick tap upside down usually does it. Use a brush or the PAX multi-tool to clear stubborn bits.
- Remove the old screen. It sits at the bottom of the oven chamber. The PAX multi-tool or a small flat tool slides under the edge and lifts it out. If it's really stuck with resin, a 30-second soak in isopropyl alcohol (90% concentration or higher) loosens it.
- Drop in a fresh screen from this set. It should sit flat against the bottom of the oven — no bending, no forcing. The screen is sized to fit snugly without any wiggle.
- Replace the oven lid, pack your herb, and you're good to go. You'll notice the improved airflow on the very first draw.










