MSR Titan Cook sets

MSR Titan Cook sets 

DESCRIPTION

When fast-and-light travel matters, opt for this 3-piece cookset weighing in at just over 9 ounces. The Titan Cookset is made of titanium, a metal that’s 45 percent lighter than steel and stronger than aluminum.

USER REVIEWS

Showing 1-9 of 9  
[May 02, 2003]
Brian
Backpacker

This is a great cookset. Super light and so far has held up well. I didn't pay full price, but after owning the set, if I ever loose it, and need to replace it, I would have no problem spending the money on on a new one, b/c I think it is worth it. Ultralite is the way to go.

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
4
[Apr 01, 2002]
travelthomas
Car Camper

The Titan Kettle works great for anything liquid. It has a tight lid which is great for draining off pasta water. I didn''t have any problems with things burning on the bottom, but then I''m not much of a cook. My girlfriend laughed at how much I paid for the thing, but then she used it "ALL" the time.

Customer Service

No need

Similar Products Used:

Alunimum, which may be unsafe.

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
3
[Dec 26, 2001]
Rosie McKenzie
Backpacker

Strength:

None

I bought this as it lookrd very interesting, but being from England, the import bumped the price up a great deal, hense the $150 or so it cost me. In UK money, it cost £100. I really wanted to like this set more than I did, but I have a few niggles about it. I also bought the kettle and the titan cup too, but that is not included in the price I stated. On the plus side, it''s well made. There are measurement marks on the inside which I have found very useful, and the titanium it is made from is very strong and durable. On the negative side, the handles. They dont lock, so I have found that if the stove is on a slight tilt, the handles wander sideways and drift into the flame. Also, the handles are not insulated so I have to use a bandanna to grip the handles with, or use the litelifter which adds extra weight. I''d rather have insulated handles like on my evernew set so I don''t have to worry about burns and/or taking the litelifter with me. That, I just find too fussy to use. That may not bother some people, but being an ultralightist, I don''t like carrying anything unecessary. I hovever did solve this by putting tubing from my platypus around all the handles. The frypan/ lid/ plate is useful, though I would like to see this in non stick so as I don''t weld my much desired sosmix-burgers to it anymore! The rest of the pan, I''m happy to have uncoated. As stated, I also have the titan mug, and the kettle too. The kettle is ok, but I find things boil faster in the big pot, and the titan mug can be used to heat drinka on its own in, though it''s not really the correct shape for this. Indeed, I have sucessfully carried on ultralight weekends, the titan mug and the .6l inner pan to feed myself with sucessfully. Much longer than this however, and I need a bigger capacity pan as after a few days my apatite soars and a full .6l with a one pot meal just doesn''t quite fill me. For groups of two or more the whole set is great though. Not sure exactly of the weight, but it''s much lighter than any steel sets I have seen.

Customer Service

Great. When there was no pot lifter in the set, one was ordered for me immediately and it arrived within 4 days

Similar Products Used:

Stainless steel sets, evernew sets

OVERALL
RATING
3
VALUE
RATING
2
[Jul 08, 2001]
Hungry Howie
Backpacker

This review is for the MSR Titan Kettle.

I have both the MSR Titan Cookset, and the kettle. I used the 1L pot to thruhike the Appalachian Trail with last year, but wanted something with an integral handle. My answer, the kettle. "At first I was afraid, I was petrified." I just couldn't concieve that this little bugger could hold a deluxe mac-n-cheese, a staple of life on the trail. So I finally got up the guts to fork out $50 to find out. The result? Fantastic! It holds a deluxe mac-n-cheese...just barely. The guy at MSR who thought this up gets my award for the most thoughtful gear designer in the world. Any pot that holds a mac-n-cheese and weighs 4oz, and takes up less space than a large can of peaches is a pot that I've got to have! Ofcourse it comes with MSR's renouned quality and craftmanship. You've got to love the tight fitting lid as well. You can nearly fill it with water, and pick it up BY THE LID! This is, by far, the best engineered cooking pot for outdoorsmen that I've ever found.

Customer Service

Never a negative experience here.

Similar Products Used:

Evernew Ti pots. They suck, really bad. Coatings chip quickly, the Ti is a poor quality, the silicone handle insulators burn up the first time you use them, and the handles don't feel solid. The only good thing about them is the fact that they're light and cheap. And remember, you get what you pay for...

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Jun 06, 2001]
Stephen Harrold
Backpacker

Was lucky to get an amazing deal. Bought this set for $40 CDN at a local store during its "going out of business" sale. Was planning to purchase it anyways at its full price.

This cookset is amazing, great way to save weight and its durable. I've brought it along on many treks now and its holding up great.

It does not have a non-stick coating, but I rarely cook in the pots/pan themselves. Mostly boil water. When I do need to cook, I add a touch of oil or butter which does the trick.

I'm on the hunt for a good deal on the 2 liter titan.

Similar Products Used:

None

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
4
[Feb 28, 2001]
Jwo
Backpacker

I have the MSR Titan Kettle, and it is by far the best solo cookware being made. It's big enough to cook any reasonable meal, but small enough to use as a cup for hot chocolate before i go to bed. The lid fits tight and has a spout to drain water out of you pasta. It weighs only 4 oz.. I feel the price is justified if you use it a lot, like anything. The Ti used is a little thicker and stronger than the stuff used by Evernew, I've heard this is because MSR uses Ti made in the US, and Evernew gets theirs from China. Team this thing with a Gigapower or Pocket Rocket and you've got a complete setup that weighs under a half pound. You can't beat that.

Similar Products Used:

MSR Stowaway, Evolution 2

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
4
[Feb 19, 2001]
Ben
Backpacker

I recently purchased the Evernew titanium cook set and it's by far the best set of titanium cookware made. The MSR cookset is a huge ripoff! It's way over priced and doesn't have the non-stick coating. Anyone who boasts about the MSR is trying to justify their high priced purchase.

Customer Service

MSR has marginal customer service, they refused to send me a .25 cent replacement wick for my dragonfly stove

Similar Products Used:

various s.s.,aluminum and the MSR titan cookset I returned back to REI, if you need titanium go with Evernew

OVERALL
RATING
2
VALUE
RATING
2
[Feb 18, 2001]
Jeremy Padgett
Backpacker

The Titan Cookset is fantastic. Because I am a long-distance backpacker, and use this as my kitchen for an average of six months every year, I consider it the best that money can buy. I exclusively use either Titanium or Stainless Steel cookware (even at home) because both are chemically non-reactive. Being a nut, I am somewhat concerned with the possible linkage of aluminum depository buildups in brain matter in Alzheimer’s patients. Thus I do not use it, paranoid as I am. I now also use exclusively MSR titanium because they refuse to put any sort of coating on their Titanium cookware, which have been linked to cause cancers. I consider MSR titanium cookware the safest, highest quality cookware available. I also consider it to be a fantastic value, seeing as I use the same pot six months out of the year. If you only backpack a few weeks a year, don’t get Titanium; it’s a waste of your money. But if you’re like me, and spend every second that you can in the backcountry; fork it out this once and you’ll never have to again. Happy trails!

Customer Service

MSR has wonderful customer service. Always willing to help out the hiker!

Similar Products Used:

Various aluminum non-stick stuff, Evernew Titanium (this stuff is crap), MSR Stainless pots (wonderful workmanship, cost, and durability). When it comes to kitchen stuff, you just can't beat MSR. I've never had a piece of MSR gear fail in the backcountry that couldn't be repaire right then and there. Wonderful stuff.

-Hungry Howie & The New Sushi GA-mE 2000

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
4
[Jan 22, 2001]
Aaron
Backpacker

I have the titan .85 liter titanium tea kettle. At 4 ounces it complements my 3 ounce snow peak stove with delight. The only other titanium tea kettle I know of is the one made by evernew which is $40. Though both weigh and hold the same amount I chose the more expensive MSR due to it's tighter fitting lid.

Customer Service

none, but I think the Evernew brand is a better value compared to MSR in the titanium line.

Similar Products Used:

2.6 and 1.9 liter titanium evernew cook pots, MSR gourmet blacklite cookware- nonstick surface is not durable and scratchs too easily, trangia stainless steel pots

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
4
Showing 1-9 of 9  

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