This axle only fits certain hubs. Not for a Vado SL for sure (F: 12x110 mm front, R: 12x148 mm).
DT Swiss makes them in a
wide variety of sizes. I have one for a 12x148 on the back of one of my Bullitts. It has about three threads sticking out the drive side. If anything I want it to have extra threads so it has some added fault tolerance built in. Getting a thru axle to fit that you have to source yourself also requires that you get the right thread pitch in addition to overall length, diameter, thread length etc.
you need this guy its easy to use the lever as a rachet.
You probably already know this but the DT Swiss lever on their thru axles is removable. It is a hex key when it is separated, which means you can also take it off and keep it off, and use an ordinary hex key in the lever's place.
When attached, it is spring-loaded on a ratchet mech inside of itself. So you pull up on it to disengage the ratchets, reposition it so you get good lever age and turn it to loosen. Then you repeat the process as much as needed. You could also just pull it off and use a long-handled hex key wrench for some serious leverage. Theoretically it is at risk to theft but its not much of a risk and you will lose nothing if its swiped thanks to the ability to use an ordinary hex wrench instead.
I recently added a PrestaCycle TorqRatchet to my bike kit, which I use for my T25 needs and hex keys where I can with the included bits. Its also a 3-12Nm beam-style torque wrench that seems to be quite accurate (compared it to my Wera 5-25Nm wrench and the two came out equivalent), and its really small. 12 Nm is enough to work on everything but a crank bolt, and its nice to not need to guess on torque roadside.
Thru axles are darn near the only thing I don't use a torque wrench on when it comes to a bike, where using a torque wrench keeps you from guessing or making the common stupid mistake of overtightening. (5-6 Nm on an M5 bolt is not a whole lot and a human will almost always screw that up). I get the axles pretty tight and leave them at that. The nature of a thru axle means it has to rotate a few times (which is visible via the lever long before it gets to a single rotation) to come loose and even then the axle is fully captured, unlike a QR skewer. I do make a point of checking them every month or two.