TinyMight / TM 2

maremaresing

Well-Known Member
Accessory Maker
Thank you both so much for the compliments and interest! That stem I displayed is truly my own stem that I created for myself after liking a similar commissioned item so much I had to possess one. Since I love posting on FC in my personal life, and want to respect the device makers threads, I try to avoid anything that would seem like spamming or advertising.

I just make stuff for myself, too, and love using these devices with them. And I'm truly proud of how they come to fruition. ^_^

So thanks for checking out my thread and highlighting the link in my sig!

If you mean 'share', as in, 'willing to make more and sell them to others'... I'm in line, as of this writing. :tup:

When I first saw your pics, I instantly envisioned (and virtually felt!) a blistered pair of lips on my end. However, your statement that you're 'turning down to 7' suggests that heat is no issue at all. I run at 8.5.

I plan to use mine in a mobile environment / on the go, now that I've had mine for a couple of weeks and dialed it in for my needs.

So... while I enjoy my current stems for the most part, it would be a problem if I were to drop the unit and break them. This looks perfect, at least for the stem... now, how about some 'body armor' with an internal shock cushioning system for the entire unit? :lmao:
(Just kidding... I'd carry the thing in a Pelican case, if I had to worry that much about it.

They are live now! :D

I understand the TM2 has a bit of variance in the temperature dial calibration, but it seems we have similar usage. I've stayed between 7-8.5 so far, because I like really high temp extraction and don't temp step. The TM2 rules for "pick up, press button, get clouds" operation! Many mornings I wake up and find the green light blinking happily away since the night before, awaiting my call. :love:

To address the surface heat query; even the thinner low profile I listed in the first post does not have this issue. Since I make these for myself, and have full control over the creation process, I found and designed away from surface heat early on. Metal gets a bad rap, but it's really a materials choice.

In the original, they use glass paired with the CU, which is a good choice because glass is a good insulator. If that glass stem was changed to another material that has better heat transfer, then it will start to transfer that heat wherever possible.

On my stems my desire and goal was actually to create the lowest profile option to pair with the shape and beauty of the TM2. (The chonky stem above is my largest and is an outlier that should not be counted lolol). For this, I had to design from scratch without the very tall stock CU.

The FlipDome system as in other stems occupies a narrower and shorter space, allowing for extra thermal mass and fins, and a potentially lower design. I'm happy with it.


Yeah that stem paired with the unit is absolutely beautiful, I would definitely be interested in purchasing one as well!

Thank you! It's sooooooo pretty and the TM2 has a very nice heft and balance now. Since the device lives on my desk, I spend a lot of time just holding and admiring it. These TinyMights have the kind of "modbox" design and shape that I feel begs for this accoutrement.

I wonder if the TM had been released before the modbox type devices, if I'd have thought the same. On the smaller lower stem, it reminded me of some decorative nautical device or flask, so perhaps there are still many analogues.

Certainly the Cool Fall Spy 007 flashlights were my introduction to this form and shape, and they predate the modbox scene by several years.

0UhlJM2.jpeg



Anyways, I'm continually surprised that the TM2 has integrated itself fully into the rotation, passing the reach test most days, given my initial and longtime thoughts on the device. Having near instant on demand heavy hitter convection without risk of combustion in the palm of my hand is so awesome.
 

ploooopp

Well-Known Member
Random question, can you bypass the need for a battery and run it straight from the wall? Might need a dummy battery or something
 
ploooopp,

dude_de

Well-Known Member
Random question, can you bypass the need for a battery and run it straight from the wall? Might need a dummy battery or something
Haven't tried it, but I don't see how it would work. The TM2 has a 70W heater and I don't think it supports the latest and greatest USB C PD specs.
 
dude_de,
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Xenkishøtz

𝓣Ø𝓜𝓑𝓗Ø𝓤𝓢𝓔 𝓣𝓥
Had mine over a year now and I am very pleased with it I can't lie. Odd little gripe here and there but nothing dealbreaking, not even close.
My stock stems with CU gunked up so quickly so I've got that on the side awaiting a clean lol whilst I run the titanium stock with screen through my girlfriend's bong which happens to be the perfect size for the jury rigged WPA I created. Some form of silicone taken from an unused water dispenser. "high temp" silicone is just a marketing label, same as "medical grade" so I figured if it's rated for consumption through it's not the worst thing in the world to use.

Genuinely takes me back to being a young ass jit smoking in the woods and getting so high my visual framerate starts to drop.
The silicone thing came apart in my hands and I dread to think what I was inhaling. Don't be a dumbass like me.
 
Xenkishøtz,

Xenkishøtz

𝓣Ø𝓜𝓑𝓗Ø𝓤𝓢𝓔 𝓣𝓥
i'm not sure that statements like "high temp and medical grade are just marketing" should be made without some sort of supporting evidence
I mean, it's clear certain types of material are more heat resistant than others, but there's no official certification for those labels so it is essentially meaningless. You just have to trust the manufacturer is in fact using appropriate silicone.

I've since replaced it with a section of my V-Tower whip silicone and it works perfectly with no issues. So yes, I'm half a dumbass but my point about it being for marketing hype is legit. I don't have any sources on hand (I've just sat down after the store lol) but I could always look.
 
Xenkishøtz,

Pib

Well-Known Member
Thought about it too, then came pictures of the flip dome, my favorite was posted on etsy, bang boom, now I'm waiting because it's at customs right now...
 
Pib,

Durbandream

Well-Known Member
Finally got a TM2, went with the PH package from Vgoodiez 420 sale with the missile stem.

On Demand
I love this thing. Admittedly in my honeymoon phase but on-demand mode is instantly spectacular. I'm generally into low temp flavors and setting the TM2 PH to 2-3, pulls out flavors that beat the Firefly2, except with much less effort. Probably like 2 warm up draws still full of terps. And then it start putting out a bunch of vapor that maintains flavor for the next 10 draws or so. Generally I'm taking 8-10 second draws with maybe 10 seconds in between. With the TM2 PH and the missile stem the vapor is so cool I can just keep taking draw after draw and neitehr the vapor nor the tip of the stem get hot. However at this point im generallly comletely medicated. I'm really loving this thing right now.

Session Mode
This seems like a throwaway on the PH. The only temp worth trying it turning down the heat to 1 or .5 and then about 1 minute or maybe a minute 20 seconds into the session vapor it very hot flavors all gone. I might have to play a bit more, but the temp knob is basically useless as far as I can tell in Session Mode. I feel like setting it one 1 is like setting my ALP on 430 in session mode.

Verdict
Being maybe the best on-demand vape in the world, I'm not gonna grip about session mode, becuase who needs it when the device heats up this fast. Right now for flavor vapor and repeatabiltiyt I like it more than my SplinterZ in TC mode and my P80, and Firewoods. The PH is a winner!
Session mode is great. Try setting it to a higher temp like 7, waiting until you get the ready buzz, then let it preheat for about 15 seconds before you pull for a pretty massive hit.
 
Durbandream,
Since I've had mine for about a month now, I've noticed a couple of things regarding button use, and will pass them down for those who might experience issues using their pinky to fire the button reliably, or might think their button is sketchy...

- The TM folks use a really soft seating battery compartment cover (o-ring). If I were to guess, it's to discourage over tightening. That's a really good thing, considering what the battery sits on. However, you may be tempted to see just how lightly you can seat it, and still get the confirmation feedbacks. Don't do this. Rather, turn it an additional 1/8th turn from first contact. Not super tight, just 'enough'.

- While my pinky is fairly strong (weakest is your ring finger), it's also small. Which means I have less fine control over it, from a pressure / holding standpoint.

For me, I found my button activity getting weirder and weirder -- until I snugged down the battery button, and started using my opposite hand's index finger, as a test. Sure enough, no more issues. I've since adjusted my grip so that I use my same hand's middle finger, with the index bracing above, while ring (& pinky) finger brace from below. I'll be experimenting with this, for sure, going forward. But no more pinky firing, for me! :lol:


Bonus tip: Noticing a rattle from inside your TM2? Taken out the battery, and the heater-side parts... and *still* hear the rattle? Like a ball bearing sorta sound? Check to see that your stir / cleaning tool didn't unthread itself from the 'handle', rolling up / down in it's compartment. Yeah... it's threaded! Easily solved with a tiny amount of threadlocker, if you don't want it to happen again.
(If you don't pull out the tool often, you may experience this, vs someone who always uses their tool) :cool:
 

mulciber

Member
Bonus tip: Noticing a rattle from inside your TM2? Taken out the battery, and the heater-side parts... and *still* hear the rattle? Like a ball bearing sorta sound? Check to see that your stir / cleaning tool didn't unthread itself from the 'handle', rolling up / down in it's compartment. Yeah... it's threaded! Easily solved with a tiny amount of threadlocker, if you don't want it to happen again.
(If you don't pull out the tool often, you may experience this, vs someone who always uses their tool) :cool:

Great advice! This happened to me, and I foolishly removed the bottom plate before thinking to look there.
 
Great advice! This happened to me, and I foolishly removed the bottom plate before thinking to look there.
I was headed that way, but figured it out just in time :wave: To add insult to injury, I knew the rod was threaded, and that it could come loose. (which is why I stopped using it, in the first place). For me, that area is now just a visual lamp indicator 💡:lol:
 

Dr. G

Vapman Collector Vapman Beta Tester eMuseo Vapman
Since I've had mine for about a month now, I've noticed a couple of things regarding button use, and will pass them down for those who might experience issues using their pinky to fire the button reliably, or might think their button is sketchy...

- The TM folks use a really soft seating battery compartment cover (o-ring). If I were to guess, it's to discourage over tightening. That's a really good thing, considering what the battery sits on. However, you may be tempted to see just how lightly you can seat it, and still get the confirmation feedbacks. Don't do this. Rather, turn it an additional 1/8th turn from first contact. Not super tight, just 'enough'.

- While my pinky is fairly strong (weakest is your ring finger), it's also small. Which means I have less fine control over it, from a pressure / holding standpoint.

For me, I found my button activity getting weirder and weirder -- until I snugged down the battery button, and started using my opposite hand's index finger, as a test. Sure enough, no more issues. I've since adjusted my grip so that I use my same hand's middle finger, with the index bracing above, while ring (& pinky) finger brace from below. I'll be experimenting with this, for sure, going forward. But no more pinky firing, for me! :lol:


Bonus tip: Noticing a rattle from inside your TM2? Taken out the battery, and the heater-side parts... and *still* hear the rattle? Like a ball bearing sorta sound? Check to see that your stir / cleaning tool didn't unthread itself from the 'handle', rolling up / down in it's compartment. Yeah... it's threaded! Easily solved with a tiny amount of threadlocker, if you don't want it to happen again.
(If you don't pull out the tool often, you may experience this, vs someone who always uses their tool) :cool:
The tool thing happened to me!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! That is funny!!!!!!!!!!! I just love my TM2 what an amazing vape.
 

Shit Snacks

Milaana. Lana. LANA. LANAAAA! (TM2/TP80/BAK/FW9)
But no more pinky firing, for me! :lol:

That actually makes a lot of sense and I never thought of it before, to ask people who have button problems how they use it exactly with which finger... I definitely don't find it comfortable with the pinky, and there's no reason to try to clutch the whole device, so I typically hold it lower and use each hand's variety of different fingers depending on the configuration as I move it around lol
 

OlfactoryHue

New Member
was also curious if people with button problems are ones who swap the batteries out super often vs less often or even vs some who might not at all and actually just charge it with usbc seems a lot of people are users to the point of changing many batteries per day or had read about needing to slide it in sideways etc.... etiher way i wouldn't figure the primary tactile function/fire trigger to have that many issues when a manufacturer knows it's going to be pressed thousands and thousdands of times
 
OlfactoryHue,
was also curious if people with button problems are ones who swap the batteries out super often vs less often or even vs some who might not at all and actually just charge it with usbc
I do swap batteries when using it, as I don't like being tethered to a power cable when vaping (exception being a ball vape). But 'button problems' aren't the exclusive province of a suboptimal battery <> device connection. See below.

etiher way i wouldn't figure the primary tactile function/fire trigger to have that many issues when a manufacturer knows it's going to be pressed thousands and thousdands of times
You'd think. And I'll be honest... even though my own TM2 is supposed to be the revised version, I see the button as the potential weak point. Which means I'm going to use it as optimally as I can, given its design limitations.

IOW... a good button press is as straight up / down as possible. Not a rolloff on either side (like my pinky is wont to do). The more 'failed' presses that happen... snowball into panic. It's at that time that stopping to review process becomes valuable.

These things don't go on sale too often, and they can't be warranty swapped at the local Walmart (although I hear the mfgr is pretty quick with the service from Finland) 🇫🇮:tup:
 
Bakin4Life,

Northbear

Well-Known Member
I just went through button repairs for one of my TM2s back in April. The switch had separated from the circuit board.
The TM2 is designed to hold in your hand with the button against your palm. You switch by squeezing the unit.

The problem is, the button motion (and resulting force) are parallel to the circuit board. This creates a "shearing" effect
that doesn't sit well with surface mounted components. With other vapes (say the Boundless CFV), the button
motion/force is perpendicular to the circuit board. This creates a "compression" effect, so the switch stays mounted to
the board.

The TM2 that failed had just the switch soldered to the circuit board. My other TM2 (9 months newer) has a blob of
adhesive from the back of the switch to the circuit board (in between the switch and USB C connector), so there was
some changes made by Tinymight to mitigate the switch problems.

Recent photos show that Tinymight has changed the switch to one that has better mounting to the circuit board. Think
pins fitting in holes in the board (maybe?). There are also changes to the "plunger" part of the button. A notch in the
circuit board also limits inward travel of the button. This is what is in the TM2 I had repaired.
 
Northbear,
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