Dangle Supply

Dangle Supply Ti Cobb, Pipes & Bongs: Built to Last

Glass breaks. Titanium doesn't. Dangle Supply crafts incredibly lightweight, nearly indestructible bongs and pipes designed for people who actually take their gear outside.

Whether you are packing light for a camping trip or just want a setup that can survive a drop on the patio, this lineup is built for it. The DangleBong Titanium Waterpipe gives you smooth water filtration without the anxiety of shattering glass. For a quicker, more portable option, the Ti Cobb and WizardStix hand pipes offer clean hits in a rugged, corrosion-resistant package. It is high-performance hardware made for the trail, the park, or anywhere else your day takes you.

Shop the complete Dangle Supply collection at Smoke & Vape. Every order over $49 ships free across Canada and is backed by a 30-day satisfaction guarantee. Grab some titanium and never worry about broken glass again.

Dangle Supply Ti Cobb, Pipes & Bongs: Built to Last

Glass breaks. Titanium doesn't. Dangle Supply crafts incredibly lightweight, nearly indestructible bongs and pipes designed for people who actually take their gear outside.

Whether you are packing light for a camping trip or just want a setup that can survive a drop on the patio, this lineup is built for it. The DangleBong Titanium Waterpipe gives you smooth water filtration without the anxiety of shattering glass. For a quicker, more portable option, the Ti Cobb and WizardStix hand pipes offer clean hits in a rugged, corrosion-resistant package. It is high-performance hardware made for the trail, the park, or anywhere else your day takes you.

Shop the complete Dangle Supply collection at Smoke & Vape. Every order over $49 ships free across Canada and is backed by a 30-day satisfaction guarantee. Grab some titanium and never worry about broken glass again.


Dangle Supply Makes the Case for Leaving Glass at Home

If you've ever wrapped a bong in a hoodie and hoped for the best, you already know why Smoke & Vape carries titanium pipes and waterpipes. Glass is fragile, and that's fine when it sits on your coffee table, but the moment your gear goes into a bag or onto a patio, one bad bump turns it into garbage. Dangle Supply's entire lineup is built from lightweight, corrosion-resistant titanium that won't shatter, crack, or chip, so the material itself removes the biggest risk of owning a pipe. You're still getting water filtration on the bong side and clean, compact hand pipes for quicker sessions. The tradeoff isn't function; it's just that you'll never have to replace a piece because you knocked it off a picnic table.

Product Best For Why We'd Recommend It One Thing to Know
DangleBong Titanium Bong
DangleBong Titanium Bong
Someone who wants water filtration they can throw in a bag without a second thought You get the smooth, cooled hits of a waterpipe in a body that won't break if it tips over or falls off a table. It's still a bong, so it's bulkier than the hand pipes and needs water to function properly.
Ti Cobb Titanium Pipe
Ti Cobb Titanium Pipe
Quick sessions where you don't want to fuss with water or carry much A compact, corrosion-resistant hand pipe that can take a beating and still hit clean. No water filtration, so hits will be warmer and harsher than the DangleBong Titanium Bong.
WizardStix Titanium Pipe
WizardStix Titanium Pipe
Someone who wants a titanium hand pipe and is watching their budget Same rugged titanium build as the Ti Cobb Titanium Pipe, currently on sale so you're spending less to go indestructible. It's a similar hand pipe format to the Ti Cobb Titanium Pipe, so pick based on which shape and feel you prefer, not function.

The real split here is whether you want water filtration or not. If smoother, cooled hits matter to you, the DangleBong Titanium Bong is the only one in the lineup that does that. If you'd rather keep things small and simple, grab whichever hand pipe fits your hand (and your budget) better.

What You Should Know About Dangle Supply Before You Buy

Titanium sounds indestructible, and it mostly is, but the material behaves differently from glass in ways that affect your actual smoking experience. Here's what we've learned from handling and selling these pieces at Smoke & Vape, and what customers don't always think to ask.

How Titanium Conducts Heat Differently Than Glass

Glass is a poor heat conductor, which means the bowl heats where the flame hits and stays cool everywhere else. Titanium conducts heat much more evenly across its surface, so the walls of the bowl warm up faster and retain that warmth longer between hits. That's an advantage for combustion efficiency (your herb burns more completely), but it also means the exterior of a titanium pipe gets noticeably warm during a session. Most people assume a metal pipe will feel like holding a glass one. It won't. You'll want to be mindful of where you grip, especially on compact hand pipes like the Ti Cobb Titanium Pipe or WizardStix Titanium Pipe where your fingers sit close to the bowl.

Why Titanium Doesn't Affect Taste the Way Other Metals Do

A common concern we hear is that metal pipes make smoke taste metallic. That's true for aluminum or brass, because those metals oxidize and their surface coatings break down with repeated heating. Titanium is different: it forms a stable oxide layer that resists corrosion even at high temperatures, which is why it's used in surgical implants and aerospace parts. That oxide layer doesn't flake, leach, or degrade with use, so the flavor profile stays neutral over time. You'll still notice a difference from glass (glass is completely inert), but it's far less than what you'd get from a cheap metal pipe at a gas station.

What Water Filtration Actually Changes About a Hit

Water doesn't just cool smoke; it also filters out heavier particulate matter and some water-soluble compounds before they reach your lungs. The result is a smoother draw with less throat irritation, which is why bongs feel easier to inhale from than dry pipes. The DangleBong Titanium Bong gives you that filtration in a titanium body, but keep in mind that water filtration only works when the downstem is submerged. Too little water and smoke bypasses it entirely. Too much and you'll pull water into your mouth. If you've never used a waterpipe before, fill it so the downstem sits about a centimetre below the waterline and adjust from there.

How to Clean Titanium Without Ruining It

People who've owned glass pieces tend to reach for isopropyl alcohol and coarse salt, which works fine on borosilicate but isn't always necessary with titanium. Titanium's corrosion resistance means resin doesn't bond to the surface as stubbornly as it does to glass. A soak in warm water with isopropyl alcohol loosens buildup quickly, and you won't need abrasive scrubbing that could scratch a glass piece. One thing people get wrong: they assume titanium can't stain. It can. Prolonged resin contact will discolour the surface, so don't let a dirty pipe sit for weeks between cleanings. The metal won't degrade, but it'll look rough if you neglect it.

Why Shape Matters More Than You'd Think on a Hand Pipe

The Ti Cobb Titanium Pipe and WizardStix Titanium Pipe are both titanium hand pipes, but they're shaped differently, and that shape changes how they sit in your hand, how airflow moves through the chamber, and how much herb the bowl holds. A longer, narrower pipe gives smoke more distance to cool before it hits your lips. A shorter, wider pipe delivers a more direct draw with less cooling. Most customers at Smoke & Vape pick based on looks alone, but we'd suggest holding both (or at least comparing dimensions) and thinking about how you actually smoke. If you take slow, long draws, a shape with more internal length serves you better. If you prefer quick, punchy hits, a compact form factor does the job.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do titanium waterpipes change the smoking experience compared to a glass bong?

The core experience is actually more similar than you'd expect. Water filtration works the same way regardless of what the chamber is made from: smoke passes through water, cools down, and arrives at your lungs smoother and less irritating than it would from a dry pipe. The DangleBong Titanium Bong delivers that same filtered draw you'd get from a glass bong, just without the fragility.

Where you'll notice a difference is in the feel of the piece itself. Glass has a certain weight and thermal neutrality that a lot of people associate with "quality." Titanium is lighter and warms up during a session, so the piece feels different in your hands even if the hit feels similar. Some people love how lightweight the DangleBong Titanium Bong is; others take a session or two to stop expecting it to feel like glass.

There's also a practical shift in how you think about the piece. With a glass bong, part of your brain is always tracking where it is and whether it's near an edge. With a titanium waterpipe, that mental overhead just disappears. You can set it down on uneven ground, toss it in a bag with your other gear, or use it on a rocky campsite without treating it like something precious. For a lot of people, that change in mindset is the biggest difference of all.

Does titanium affect the flavour compared to glass or ceramic?

Honestly, yes, but probably less than you're worried about. Glass and ceramic are both completely inert materials, meaning they contribute nothing to the flavour of your smoke. Titanium isn't quite at that level, but it's far closer to neutral than most metals you've probably smoked from before.

The reason titanium performs so much better than, say, aluminum or brass is that it forms a stable oxide layer on its surface when exposed to heat. That layer doesn't break down, flake off, or react with smoke the way cheaper metals do. So the metallic taste people associate with gas station pipes or low-grade one-hitters isn't really a titanium thing; it's a cheap metal thing. The Ti Cobb Titanium Pipe, WizardStix Titanium Pipe, and DangleBong Titanium Bong are all working with a material that's been trusted in medical and aerospace applications precisely because it stays chemically stable under stress.

If you're a flavour purist who can detect subtle differences between pieces, you may still prefer glass or ceramic for home sessions. That's a fair preference. But if you want something you can take outside without worrying about it, titanium is the closest thing to glass-level neutrality in a material that can actually survive your trip.

Do titanium pipes get hot to hold during a session?

They do, and it's worth being upfront about that. Titanium conducts heat more efficiently than glass, which means warmth from the bowl spreads through the body of the pipe during use. On a hand pipe like the Ti Cobb Titanium Pipe or WizardStix Titanium Pipe, your fingers sit close to the bowl, so you'll feel that warmth building up over the course of a session in a way you might not with a glass spoon.

It's not a burning situation under normal use, but it is noticeable, and it catches people off guard if they're expecting a glass-like experience. The fix is simple: pay attention to where you're gripping and give the pipe a moment to cool between longer sessions. Most people adapt to it quickly.

The DangleBong Titanium Bong is a bit different because you're holding the body of the waterpipe rather than sitting your fingers near a bowl. The chamber still warms up, but it's more spread out across a larger surface area, so it's less concentrated than what you'd feel on a compact hand pipe. If heat sensitivity is a real concern for you, the bong format is the more comfortable option in this lineup.

How durable is a titanium bong in real-world drops and travel situations?

Very durable, in the ways that actually matter. The DangleBong Titanium Bong isn't going to shatter on a hardwood floor or crack against a rock the way a glass bong would. That's the fundamental promise of titanium, and it holds up. If your biggest fear with a bong is that it'll be destroyed in transit or during an outdoor session, titanium solves that problem.

What people sometimes don't account for is that "durable" doesn't mean every component is indestructible. If the DangleBong Titanium Bong uses any rubber gaskets, silicone seals, or removable parts, those components have their own lifespan and can wear with repeated use. The titanium body itself is the part that's genuinely tough; the rest of the piece is only as durable as the materials it's made from. Treat those components with the same care you'd give any bong.

In practical travel terms, a titanium bong is a completely different category from glass. You can put it in a backpack without bubble wrap, set it in a cup holder, or drop it on a trail and pick it up without inspecting it for cracks. For camping, festivals, or anyone who moves around a lot, the DangleBong Titanium Bong is the kind of piece you stop worrying about and just use.

Will a titanium pipe dent or bend if it gets stepped on or crushed in a bag?

Titanium is significantly stronger than aluminum and resists deformation much better than softer metals, but it's not immune to physical force under extreme conditions. A direct stomp or serious crush pressure could theoretically cause damage, though you'd need to apply a lot more force than an accidental bag compression or a drop to get there. For the kinds of real-world abuse most people actually put their gear through, a titanium pipe like the Ti Cobb Titanium Pipe or WizardStix Titanium Pipe holds its shape reliably.

Where titanium really stands out is in its strength-to-weight ratio. It's lighter than steel but far more resistant to bending than aluminum, which is why it ends up in bike frames, aircraft parts, and outdoor gear. A hand pipe made from it can handle being loose in a bag with keys, tools, or other hard objects without coming out deformed.

The more realistic concern isn't structural damage; it's cosmetic wear. Titanium will pick up scratches and surface marks over time, especially if it's rattling around with other hard objects. That doesn't affect how it performs, but if you care about keeping it looking new, a small pouch or case is worth using. The pipe will keep working perfectly; it just might not look pristine after a year of trail use.

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