DaVinci is moving into the concentrate category with the Electric Quartz Rig, or EQ, and the release feels like a direct extension of what the company has been building for years. DaVinci has long centered its hardware around temperature control, material quality, and a cleaner path between device and vapor, and now it is applying that same thinking to concentrates. The result is a portable e-rig that puts control and visibility at the center of the experience instead of treating them like secondary features.
That angle matters because concentrate hardware has often forced users into tradeoffs.
Flavor can suffer when heating systems are inconsistent, session settings can feel limited, and app dependence adds another layer between the user and the device. DaVinci is clearly trying to cut through that with a self-contained system that keeps controls on the unit itself and leans hard into quartz as the foundation for heating. This is the company’s first dedicated concentrate release, and it is arriving with the kind of feature set that signals DaVinci wants to enter this category with something substantial instead of a stripped-down first attempt.
A cleaner hardware approach built around quartz and control
The core of the EQ is its modular quartz heating system, built around a full quartz crucible and atomizer designed for cleaner thermal transfer and better flavor retention. That is one of the strongest points in the whole release. Quartz has long been valued for how it handles heat and preserves taste, and DaVinci is making that material choice central instead of optional.
The integrated touchscreen is another major part of the pitch. Users can adjust temperature and session settings directly on the device without needing a mobile app, which keeps the workflow immediate and far easier to manage in real time. Precision mode allows for exact temperature selection, while Smart Paths guide the temperature upward through a session for people who want a more structured progression.
The EQ also includes a heating range from 450°F to 650°F, haptic feedback, and up to 50 sessions per charge. Those are practical additions, but the bigger point is how they support a device built around repeatability and direct control rather than guesswork.

DaVinci is trying to raise the standard for concentrate sessions
One of the more interesting details is the integrated Jacuzzi water filtration system, which holds 60ml of water to cool the vapor and smooth out the draw. That pushes the EQ beyond a basic portable rig and gives it a little more session depth, especially for users who want a more refined experience without jumping to a full desk setup.
DaVinci also includes 26 customizable background themes and lighting modes, along with four colorways, which adds some flexibility on the presentation side without distracting from the hardware itself. The headline here is still performance. The company is framing the EQ around clean materials, better engineering, and the ability to see and control each part of the process.
For DaVinci, this release feels like a logical expansion rather than a side move.
The company built its reputation in dry flower devices by focusing on purity and temperature accuracy, and the Electric Quartz Rig carries that same philosophy into a different category with a stronger feature set than a lot of first entries manage.
The post DaVinci Launches Its First Concentrate Device With the EQ appeared first on Magnetic Magazine.


