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Load image into Gallery viewer, SureFire Titan Plus Ultra-Compact Variable-Output LED Keychain Light, Silver matte
Load image into Gallery viewer, SureFire Titan Plus Ultra-Compact Variable-Output LED Keychain Light, Silver matte
Load image into Gallery viewer, SureFire Titan Plus Ultra-Compact Variable-Output LED Keychain Light, Silver matte
Load image into Gallery viewer, SureFire Titan Plus Ultra-Compact Variable-Output LED Keychain Light, Silver matte
Load image into Gallery viewer, SureFire Titan Plus Ultra-Compact Variable-Output LED Keychain Light, Silver matte
Load image into Gallery viewer, SureFire Titan Plus Ultra-Compact Variable-Output LED Keychain Light, Silver matte
Load image into Gallery viewer, SureFire Titan Plus Ultra-Compact Variable-Output LED Keychain Light, Silver matte
Load image into Gallery viewer, SureFire Titan Plus Ultra-Compact Variable-Output LED Keychain Light, Silver matte
Load image into Gallery viewer, SureFire Titan Plus Ultra-Compact Variable-Output LED Keychain Light, Silver matte
Load image into Gallery viewer, SureFire Titan Plus Ultra-Compact Variable-Output LED Keychain Light, Silver matte
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, SureFire Titan Plus Ultra-Compact Variable-Output LED Keychain Light, Silver matte
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, SureFire Titan Plus Ultra-Compact Variable-Output LED Keychain Light, Silver matte
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, SureFire Titan Plus Ultra-Compact Variable-Output LED Keychain Light, Silver matte
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, SureFire Titan Plus Ultra-Compact Variable-Output LED Keychain Light, Silver matte
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, SureFire Titan Plus Ultra-Compact Variable-Output LED Keychain Light, Silver matte
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, SureFire Titan Plus Ultra-Compact Variable-Output LED Keychain Light, Silver matte
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, SureFire Titan Plus Ultra-Compact Variable-Output LED Keychain Light, Silver matte
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, SureFire Titan Plus Ultra-Compact Variable-Output LED Keychain Light, Silver matte
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, SureFire Titan Plus Ultra-Compact Variable-Output LED Keychain Light, Silver matte
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, SureFire Titan Plus Ultra-Compact Variable-Output LED Keychain Light, Silver matte
Vendor
SureFire

SureFire Titan Plus Ultra-Compact Variable-Output LED Keychain Light, Silver matte

4.2
Regular price
€223,00
Sale price
€223,00
Regular price
€368,00
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Save 39% (€145,00)
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  • Tracked Shipping on All Orders
  • 14 Days Returns

Description

  • Virtually indestructible, high-performance LED is regulated to maximize output and runtime at three useful levels: 300, 75, and 15 lumens
  • Proprietary faceted reflector creates broad, smooth MaxVision Beam that matches your field of view--and allows for better situational awareness
  • Head switch - simply twist counterclockwise repeatedly to activate and set output level or turn off
  • Powered by an included rechargeable AAA NiMH battery (charger sold separately); can also be powered by a single readily available AAA alkaline battery
  • Removable pocket clip allows countless secure-carry options(NO "Quick-detach" tail cap)

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Customer Reviews

The best light that will always be there for you. I've been using this flashlight for over 6 months. It a fantastic light. Some reviewers complain of the "twist activation" but it's a small price to pay for the most compact 300 lumen flashlight money can buy. It's always in my back pocket. So I'm never without a reliable light. If I'm using it a lot (couple times a day) then I'll need to put a new aaa battery in it every couple weeks for bright settings, and aaa's only cost pennies. And the low setting works for hours of continuous use past this point.I've used many surefire products over the years and they've never failed. I love the rugged design and simple "no frills" function. I hate lights with 10 different modes and other marketing hype features that are not needed. Lights have one purpose: light. And surefires always work.And the warranty is unbeatable. 5Still well regarded lumen monster, but consider the Titan-A If you need all the lumens you can get in a tiny light, hard to go wrong with the Titan-B. It can get really bright, but if I had to do it again, I'd go for the Titan-A (which I had but lost), because it's smaller, lighter (aluminum v. brass), and doesn't have the useless clip. The first Titan-B I received I returned because the clip did not even touch the body of the light, and unscrewing the tail cap to remove it was impossible. The replacement Titan-B had a "better" clip, but with so little tension as to be mostly useless. In terms of operation, the twist on/off/select UI works fine, and the head rotates smoothly. The silver/nickel finish is a bit slicker than the anodized aluminum of the Titan-A, however, so not quite as easy to operate. Again, if you need the 300 lumen output (or a 75 lumen middle output rather than the 125 lumen high output of the Titan-A), go with this one, but otherwise consider the simpler, lighter (and cheaper) Titan-A if you want a small Surefire. 3In pursuit of the ultimate keychain light. This might be it for me. I'm reviewing both the black 125 lumen version (Titan) and the brass 300 lumen version (Titan Plus).A flashlight is something I feel I need to have with me all the time, whether it's to light up the back of my computer to change a cable, looking for the keyhole, or stranded at the side of the road trying to change a tire, or just finding my way downstairs to check if I locked the front door after just got into bed. The survival instinct in me says I don't want to be caught without light at the time of need so I'm always looking for the ultimate light.So the ultimate flashlight for me is that it's one that is always with me, and that's a keychain light. I've bought quite a few over the years so let's go through them. I don't mind paying more for something that should last years, if not decades,So here are some of the keychain lights I've owned and what I think of them:1. Original LRI Photon. These little button cell flashlights still haven't been beaten in one way, they disappear on your keychain. If you need a little squirt of light, it's there. Way faster than you can light up your phone. Nice wide flood beam because it's basically a plastic shell holding a round LED bulb. The light stays on as long as you keep the button pressed. So it's unlikely you'll drain the battery by leaving it on. Long life lithium cells means it'll last years likely.2. The modern successor to the LRI Photo is the Nitecore Tube. This is like a larger LRI Photon which has a rechargeable battery. The tube is quite a bit bigger but uses a single LED just like the LRI, but you can control the brightness by clicking twice, or holding down the button. To recharge it, use a USB cable. This is big enough that it will make your keychain noticeably bulkier but the runtime and brightness is a lot higher. The highest setting of 45 lumens is very bright, so this will be more than bright enough for any close quarters task. The issue with these is that 1) the rechargeable battery won't hold its charge forever, after a couple of months, you might want to top up the charge 2) people have reported these things malfunctioning/dying. So that kinda of disqualifies it as a "light you can rely on"3. Fenix LD02. This is similar to the Surefire Titan I'm reviewing. Similar size, cheaper price, but has a nice tail clicky switch (press in to click, press again to release). The light is obviously larger/heaver than the coin cell light, but this is a real light with LED with a small lens to give a useful close range beam. Beam is floody but will still light up things at a close to medium distance (like if you need to sweep an interior area looking for something). Three light levels depending on how many times you press the switch. With a much larger AAA battery, the flashlight will last hours in low and medium modes, so you could rely on this if you get lost in the woods at night.Two issues with the light: the click switch may get activated while in your pocket and thus the battery may be accidentally drained. The three levels of brightness is not that useful because the 8 lumens low isn't all that low, say, if you wanted to read in the dark without disturbing your night vision. There isn't that much apparent difference in the modes, I would have liked more separation. The pocket clip is not very good (in that it will probably bend or release itself too easily). Being a Chinese brand light, you may be dealing with somebody in China if you have warranty support.4. Surefire Titan Plus (Titan B) model. This is the 300 "luxury" version of the Titan. It's a really cool light. Tough, made of heavy brass with three useful levels that are well spaced apart. The lowest brightness mode is also way too bright (15 lumens). It has a nice beam with long runtime in low and medium with a "turbo" mode high if you really need sweep a larger area. Because the lowest mode is 15 lumens, you'll probably be happy with using this light in that mode most of the time. Because you have to twist the head to turn it on, there are less accidental activations.The bad thing is about these kinds of light is accessing the medium and high modes since you have to repeated twist on/off/on/off/on to get at the high mode, and it's not always reliable. Sometimes it may skip a mode even if you are not firm with the twisting action (instead of Low->med->high, it might jump to medium on the first try).The brightness modes of this light are well thought out, it has a low (which I will always wish was lower), but the medium can last two hours before dropping in brightness. It's quite bright so most of the time you won't need to access the highest mode. The high is a "turbo" boost mode meant to be used for short periods of time because the brightness drops quickly after a few minutes as it starts to get hot and tax the capabilities of the little battery. Use this mode when you need to flood a large area. Also, the rechargeable battery is needed to access the high mode, a lithium non-rechargeable battery (such as Energizer Lithium Ultimate) is next best, and although it will work, don't use alkaline AAA cells because they're the weakest (and of course alkalines tend to leak and may damage your light)Twisting is easily done with one hand but if you want to access the other brightness levels, you need two hands to do the off/on/off sequence. This is not a light you want to have if you need to access the other modes often. The Fenix is better if you need a light you can flash and quickly change modes.The beam is the same across both Titan models, it uses a reflector behind glass and has unique facets in the reflector to make a beam which is smooth (no well defined spot in the middle). It's brighter in the middle and fades out to a wide flood. Great for lighting up a larger area or in close quarters. So you can't use this light as a spotlight or searchlight in an outdoor setting.The light is a bit too heavy and long and thus a bit annoying to have on your keychain. It has a neat cap on the tail which allows you to quickly detach the light from a lanyard or keychain. This is a light made more for sticking into your small jeans pocket clipped onto your pants. The pocket clip is very good.This is bit of a novelty flashlight made for flashlight fanatics but is built to last for those who take pride in ownership of a well made item. All in all, this is overkill for the "everyday" light at near $100, so I don't recommend it. I love it, but I won't pretend that there is any practical advantage to having a light like this.5. So we get to the Surefire Titan A. This only has dual output levels but is much lighter than the Ultra model because the body is aluminum instead of brass. Shorter/smaller/lighter. It's smaller than the Fenix, but has this Surefire has the advantage/disadvantage of the twist head. I tend to prefer twist heads due to the issue with accidental activations with buttons, but some people prefer the quick activation of a click button.So the light only has low and medium levels (missing the 300 lumen mode of the Titan Plus). Like the others, the low could have been lower, but at 15 lumens, this is the mode you'll probably use 80% of the time, which gives you hours of constant brightness before it starts dropping in brightness. Using a NiMH AAA battery like the one that is supplied gives the longest runtime. Because the battery is a low discharge Eneloop battery, you can rely on this light to have a useful charge even if it's sitting in the drawer for months (years?).The beam of the Surefire is very good as a close range light, it's a spot in the middle which fades smoothly into the surrounding beam. So it's basically a flood of light with a center area that is slightly brighter. This is done using a special reflector which has facets on it to defocus the center spot. Great for close quarters work. The beam is smoother than the Fenix, but the colour of the LED in my sample is more greenish.Also, unlike some other lights, the low mode does not flicker (i.e. it does not use the trick of pulsing the light multiple times per second to provide "low" level). It's a eyestrain free 15 lumens.Unfortunately, it's not perfect, there is no way to stand this light on its tail because of the keyring, and there is no pocket clip at all. Of course, there's the crazy price, which seems like 2X what it should be if you're not used to Surefire prices.But so far, I like this light. It's exactly what I want in a keychain light. Should be reliable, bright as heck, pleasant beam, long battery life and runtime, and always there for me,In conclusion, the Fenix and Titan are the best general purpose lights, the Titan Plus is a ultimate light for connoisseurs of lights, but the Photon is the light you want if you want the minimal survival light. 4Good Heavy Duty AAA Flashlight This is my second Titan Plus. I "lost" my first Titan Plus but I found it the day after my new Titan arrived, but I wanted two anyway: one for my car and one for my bedroom. I own three Fenix (LOD, LD01) AAA lights, which are better buys for the money, but the Titan is in a higher class - it is built with precision and the twist head is perfectly smooth as if on ball bearings. It's as solid as a tank with thick brass walls, which serves as the LED's head sink, which is essential when running 300 lumens out of a tiny flashlight. The only disappointments is the slightly greenish beam tint, especially when compared to the cool white of my Fenix lights. The Fenix lights are good for daily light duty, but If your light is to be used after a natural disaster, this dependable, heavy duty light is the one you want. 4Not up to Surefire standards. This is supposed to be a Surefire but it is worse than many of the cheap Chinese imports. Yes the beam is shaped well, despite an off center emitter. Yes it s bright, but what isn t these days? Comes with a nimh battery but no indication of LSD. Very light. But the real problem is the twist switch. Flickering when turning it on and off. Sometimes it gets stuck in one mode and one switch. Some times it doesn t turn on. Problems persisted after cleaning threads and contacts and relubricating lightly. Not acceptable for this expensive of a keychain light.Also worth noting is that the internal components look.... janky. Cheap plastic ring with cheap crimped contact ring. Nope. Returned due to misfunction. 1An awesome little flashlight An awesome little flashlight. I've had a 6P Original, and after that a 6PX Pro, in my pocket for the last 11 years. This little keychain light blows the 6P Original away, and is comparable in brightness to the 6PX while being small enough to not notice it on my keys. The three light modes are very useful for different applications, though I wish it was a bit quicker.Overall an amazing little light that outperforms lights much larger. Be prepared to buy rechargeable AAAs and a charger. 5Surefire Titan AAA Battery Issues It's a Surefire, it's a well constructed flashlight. But that battery issue. The one that comes with it works fine, my alkaline worked ok (a little snug but went in and out ok), but none of the Energizer Lithiums work (they all went in, but all took pliers to get them out). I called Surefire twice. The first one I talked to said that my batteries must be out of tolerance, end of discussion. The second one also said the batteries do come with varying widths, and she had to take the outer wrapper off a Lithium to get it to fit in hers (I tried that, and it does work). I asked her if sanding the inside of the flashlight (I saw that in one of the forums) would invaludate the warrenty, and she said no. I want to be able to stop at any store and buy any battery and it would fit. I tried four Eneloops, one fit the other three didn't. I tried four Energizer Lithiums, and all four fit differently; it did take pliers to remove them. I wound up sanding the inside of the flashlight. It took only a few minutes and now all the batteries fit. I still like the flashlight but am disapointed that Surefire didn't do a better quality control before releasing it. 4I really love Surefire and own 5-6 of their other lights - ... I really love Surefire and own 5-6 of their other lights - all of which are amazing. However this light, while extremely well made like all of Surefire's other lights, isn't so great. The twist on/off mechanism isn't convenient and doesn't seem as dependable as everything else Surefire does. I see they were trying to make a small package, but the light just was't for me. My twist on/off stopped working like it should and I had to return it. The seller was great and refunded my money. 3Great little light While this new Titan-A isn't like the original Titan or Titan T1A, with the almost infinite light levels, it is a great light for its size. There are some features I would like to have had on this. Rather than the twist on/off action, I would have liked the option of a click-type button on the back end like most SureFire lights. In addition to that, I would like to have a third ultra-low setting of 1 or 1 Lumen like the lowest low on the T1A.At roughly a quarter the price of the original Titan T1A, this is a great little light.The only issue I've had is that many of the rechargable AAA batteries that aren't SureFire branded are a tighter fit. I've got about a dozen Eneloop AAA's (original and new version), and all of them fit well enough that they may be inserted/removed easily, but some are a tighter fit. After some inspection, I found that the non-SureFire branded Eneloop batteries have a slightly thicker label. This is especially true of where the label overlaps itself. It's very subtle, and such a small measurement that I had to use good digital calipers to know for sure. On one hand, the tighter fit can be a slight irritation. On the other, the battery doesn't rattle around in the light like with some of the other AAA lights. I've had several lights where I've had to put a paper sleeve or tape around the batteries to keep them from rattling. 5Wish it had a tail-cap I wanted to try this since I've heard great things about Surefire products and was looking for a quality flashlight in my EDC.The good points are that is feels solid, is durable, and has the light performance you'd expect from Surefire. The nickel-brass finish is also a nice color that isn't flashy, but seems more elegant than everything else that's tactical black.Unfortunately, the usability does not agree with my style. I really wish this had a tail-cap like my other flashlights and I can't manage to find the right point in the rotational on/off where I can push the body together. If the two halves are too far apart, it doesn't make the connection reliably. If too close together, I can accidentally turn it on when I bend over or sit and the crease that forms in my pants activates it. Right now, I carry it regularly because I spent a decent amount of money on it and it does work well if I take the time to rotate it to permanent on/off. For times when I want to have a good momentary on/off, I use my old (and cheaper) 5.11 and Streamlight flashlights with the tail cap 3
SureFire Titan Plus Ultra-Compact Variable-Output LED Keychain Light, Silver matte

SureFire Titan Plus Ultra-Compact Variable-Output LED Keychain Light, Silver matte

4.2
Error You can't add more than 500 quantity.
Regular price
€223,00
Sale price
€223,00
Regular price
€368,00
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Save 39% (€145,00)