I recently snagged this venerable classic by Surefire. My second Surefire…. This is the Surefire Titan Plus, a coated brass LED light in AAA twisty format. Read on for thoughts and testing!

Official Specs and Features

Here’s a link to the official product page.

Versions

This is at least the second iteration of the Titan light. Of the Titan Plus there are at least two finishes: Nickel plated brass (seen here) and black.

Price

It seems this light is still available new around $90. I picked this up used for less.

Short Review

It’s well documented that twisties aren’t my thing. But this is probably the smoothest twisty I have ever had. It could be that the previous owner took exceptional care of it and lubed the threads before sending it, but I have a feeling it’s just that smooth. There’s PWM on low which bothers me but the other two modes are good. Output meets specification too. Overall it’s a nice light that I’d love to see updated and brought current. A better emitter, no PWM, and some aluminum options would be great!

Long Review

The Big Table

* Measurement disclaimer: I am an amateur flashlight reviewer. I don’t have $10,000 or even $1,000 worth of testing equipment. I test output and such in PVC tubes!! Please consider claims within 10% of what I measure to be perfectly reasonable (accurate, even).

What’s Included

Surefire Titan Plus Flashlight

Eneloop Pro AAA NiMH

Tailcap quick release keyring attachment

Manual

Package and Manual

The package is a blister pack, and has a bunch of light-details.

Below is the manual. Looks like it also shows the Titan (A) series light. This is the Titan Plus, aka Titan Plus (B).

Build Quality and Disassembly

Again, the first most remarkable thing about this light is the buttery smooth threads. The second remarkable thing is the heft – it’s a nickel coated brass light. So while it might look aluminum, it’s not. And the weight will tell you that immediately.

The nickel coating has a fantastic feel in hand, and gives just a tiny touch of grip. Grip is something that’s not really provided any other way, because there’s no knurling at all.

The lights are serialized, too. The tailcap has this keyring loop, which is not removable. Let’s shelve that topic for now….

The quick release is a steel friction fit piece that attaches very securely – again, more on that later.

The Surefire toupee.

The tail end has a thin spring, and the head end has only a button.

The threads might look dirty, but even if they are – so smooth is the action…. They’re just triangle cut, very fine threads.

The guts in the head just unscrew, and offer no resistance.

Despite the body of the light being brass and looking aluminum, the pill is actually aluminum. Aluminum’s great for pills, but it’s hard to understand why the body is brass, made to look like aluminum….

The emitter sits on a mcpcb which by look (and reports) is thermally glued down.

Here are some further disassembly shots, on candlepowerforums. A solid effort by Noctiluco, but not enough to convince me to reflow a different emitter on there. A hot air station is what you’d really need, I think. It’s likely that the mcpcb is thermally glued down.

Size and Comps

Officially:

Length 3.375 inches

Bezel Diameter 0.58 inches

Weight w/Batteries 2.0 ounces

Retention and Carry

First of all, there are two ways to attach a split ring. On the tailcap theres a built in loop. This of course prevents tailstanding, which I think is a terrible decision. Also there’s this clip on black split ring attachment meant for keyring use and quick release. I won’t use the quick release, but I’d prefer it to be an option with no built in loop.

The built in loop is just too much.

Also included is a pocket clip, which is a collar variety and removable. It’s not reversible though, so no hatlight use for this light. It’s not an extremely finished clip, so the edges are a bit sharp. That said, I actually like it as a clip. The mouth is small but big enough, and it holds the light deeply. If this clip doesn’t suit you, there are aftermarket clips made specially for this light, by DarkSucks. That clip is titanium.

This clip also affords the option to attach a lanyard. The tail loop does this too, really.

Power and Runtime

The Titan Plus is powered by a single AAA sized cell. Surefire includes an Eneloop Pro, which is a very nice touch. It’s unclear if this light will support a lithium ion AAA sized cell – a 10440, but at the very least it’s not officially supported. Reports are that it won’t kill your light immediately, though.

Here’s a runtime on High. Output at 30s meets specs, but soon after the voltage-tracking decline begins. There isn’t LVP, but that’s a less terrible thing for NiMH cells.

Here’s a runtime on the middle mode, and this time no fan was used. This output too is right at the specification.

Modes and Currents

Mode Mode Claimed Output (lm) Claimed Runtime Measured Lumens Tailcap Amps High 300 1h 310 Medium 75 2h 71 Low 15 7h

PWM

PWM is noticeable visibly on low, but doesn’t seem to even be present on the higher two modes.

For reference, here’s a baseline shot, with all the room lights off and almost nothing hitting the sensor. And here’s the worst PWM light I have ever owned. Also one of the very first lights I ordered directly from China!

User Interface and Operation

This is a twisty, and there are three modes with nothing hidden.

Here’s a UI table!

State Action Result Off Tighten Head Low On Loosen Head Off Low Off then On (within 1 second) Medium Medium Off then On (within 1 second) High

Some users report that there is an even lower mode available and the way to get to it is to sprinkle pixie dust on the light and twist with unicorn fingers while it’s raining mermaid tears. That lower low isn’t officially mentioned, so I’m not going to mention it here. Something lower than 15 lumens would be a nice feature, though.

LED and Beam

In this light is a Cree XP-G2. Appears to be cool white. There’s a reflector in this tiny light. I don’t know that it’s specified but it looks like a small Ledil Boom reflector.

These beamshots are always with the following settings: f8, ISO100, 0.3s shutter, and manual 5000K exposure.

Tint vs BLF-348 (Killzone 219b version)

I compare everything to the Killzone 219b BLF-348, because it’s inexpensive and has the best tint!

Random Comparisons and Competitive Options….

Here’s a link to a relevantly filtered page on parametrek.com. I use that site a lot!

This isn’t a small category. Twisty AAA light…. At $90 this isn’t particularly compelling unless you just really have to have the name Surefire on your lights, or need a brass light that looks like aluminum.

But if you can find one of these used for less, it’s much more compelling. It’s very well built, and meets specification.

Conclusion

What I like

Great heft (it’s brass!)

Includes high quality NiMH cell

Suuuuuper smooth threads

What I don’t like

Would love an uncoated brass option

Wish it was updated to a (C) version that had a better emitter and no pwm

Has PWM on low (and low is the mode you’ll see the most)

Expensive

The built in tail loop

Notes

This light was provided by me for review. I was not paid to write this review.

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