A blinker is a vape hit so long that the device's light starts blinking. That's it — that's the whole definition. Most disposable vapes and battery pens have an automatic cutoff that kicks in after a set number of seconds, usually to prevent overheating. Hold the hit until you trigger that cutoff and the indicator light blinks at you. Take a “blinker” and you've pulled the longest single draw the device will allow.
Where the term comes from

It's pure slang, born from the hardware. Most pens and disposables are built with a safety timer — draw too long and the battery shuts the heating element off and signals with a blinking light. Somewhere along the way, “hitting a blinker” became shorthand for taking the maximum hit in one go. It's a dare as much as a measurement.
How long is a blinker?
It depends entirely on the device, but most cutoffs land somewhere between 8 and 15 seconds. There's no universal standard — one pen's blinker is another pen's normal pull. That alone tells you something: a blinker isn't a dose, it's a hardware quirk.
Is a blinker bad?
Chasing blinkers is a way to consume more without meaning to. The light isn't telling you you've had “one serving” — it's telling you the battery hit its safety limit. Treating that limit as a target is how people green out, especially with potent oil. A bigger hit isn't a better one; it's just a bigger hit.
There's also what you're inhaling. Many of the devices people pull blinkers on are conduction-based, heating oil on a coil that can run hot enough to scorch. The longer the draw, the hotter it gets, and the more harsh byproducts come along for the ride.
A better way to think about a hit

The fix isn't a longer pull, it's a controlled one. The Odin™ heats flower and concentrates with precise-temperature air instead of a glowing coil, so a session is about even, measured heat — not seeing how long you can hold a draw before a light blinks. Air-based heating with no combustion is a cleaner way to consume than a coil running wide open. You set the terms. Conquer Every Puff.
For concentrates, that control gets even simpler. The Dab Stick™ loads pre-dosed rosin into the Odin — a known amount, evenly heated, no torch and no guessing how big the hit was. Master the Melt.
FAQ
What does hitting a blinker mean?
It means taking a vape draw long enough to trigger the device's automatic safety cutoff, which makes the indicator light blink. It's the longest single hit the pen will allow.
How many seconds is a blinker?
Usually between 8 and 15 seconds, depending on the device's cutoff timer. There's no fixed standard, which is exactly why it's a poor way to measure a dose.
Is taking a blinker dangerous?
It's an easy way to consume more than you intended, which can lead to greening out with strong oil. The blinking light marks a battery limit, not a safe serving size.
Why does my vape blink when I hit it?
Most often it's the draw-time safety cutoff. Blinking can also signal a low battery or a connection issue, but mid-hit blinking usually means you've reached the maximum draw length.
Done chasing a blinking light? See how the Odin puts you in control of every puff.