The video introduces the Canik TTI Combat, a 9mm pistol that had just arrived for review. The hosts explain that it was developed with Taran Butler of Taran Tactical Innovations, a nine-time Grandmaster known for training actors in the John Wick franchise and the most recent James Bond. One of the hosts mentions owning a TTI Combat Master Glock 34 and notes that Butler spent over a year working on the Canik TTI Combat. The emphasis is on Butler’s reputation as a perfectionist, his high standards, and the effort to balance performance with keeping the pistol under a specific price point while making it effective for winning matches.
The discussion moves to the Canik TTI Combat’s external features. The pistol includes a ported barrel with a compensator and lightning cuts on the slide. The hosts highlight how tightly the compensator and barrel are fitted, noting the precise machining and tight tolerances. They stress that Taran Tactical Innovations does not put its name on products that do not meet its standards. The gun remains recognizably a Canik while incorporating TTI design elements. The lightning cuts reduce slide weight and reciprocating mass, which can help with recoil management. The pistol is optics-ready and comes with a fiber optic front sight, giving it a configuration aimed at fast target acquisition and competition use.
Attention shifts to ergonomics and aesthetics. The grip has very aggressive texturing on all sides, making it easy to hold securely without slipping once a solid grip is established. The hosts praise the color scheme, describing it as a bronze or goldish-bronze finish and calling it one of the best color combinations in the Canik lineup. They then focus on the trigger, noting that Taran Butler prioritizes trigger quality. The trigger is similar to the one found in the Canik Rival and SFX Rival series, with a slightly wider trigger safety than a standard Canik. It offers a bit of take-up, a clean break at roughly a 90-degree angle, and a very short, crisp reset, characteristics associated with Canik’s competition-oriented triggers.
The hosts describe several functional details carried over from other Canik pistols. The rear of the firing pin is painted red to indicate when the pistol is cocked, and there is a loaded chamber indicator to provide additional status information. The rear sight is thinner than on most other Canik models, which, combined with the fiber optic front sight, is intended to improve target acquisition. Overall, the pistol is characterized as race-ready, designed so that a shooter can take it directly to competition. The configuration, including the compensator, slide cuts, trigger, and sight setup, is presented as focused on performance in matches rather than general-purpose use.
The video then covers what comes in the box with the Canik TTI Combat. The pistol ships in a hard case that the hosts describe as notably nicer than many others they have seen. It includes an 18-round magazine with a standard baseplate featuring the Taran Tactical logo and a 21-round magazine, with both magazines being double-stack and effectively plus-one capable. Additional backstraps are provided so the shooter can adjust the grip fit. A tool with attachments, including an Allen-type component, is included for maintenance and disassembly. The case also contains extra optic mounting plates to accommodate different red dot optics, and there is mention of a variant that ships with a Canik-branded optic already installed.
The hosts highlight a Taran Tactical Innovations challenge coin included with the pistol, suggesting it serves as a display piece and a sign of the collaboration. They mention that the Canik TTI Combat is not expected to be as widely available as standard Canik models and may be produced in more limited numbers, which could make it harder to obtain. A new holster designed for this pistol is also discussed. Instead of traditional belt clips, it uses a design that threads through the belt for increased security. The holster relies on tension rather than a button release and is described as suited for competition use, matching the pistol’s intended role.
Additional accessories in the case include cleaning tools and an extra recoil spring. The extra spring is intended to help tune the pistol for different ammunition, particularly various bullet weights used in competition. This supports the idea that the Canik TTI Combat is set up as a race-ready platform straight from the box, with the necessary tools and parts to adapt it to specific loads and match requirements. The hosts reiterate that the pistol results from a collaboration between Canik and Taran Tactical Innovations, combining Canik’s manufacturing with Taran Butler’s competition experience to create a firearm aimed at competitive shooting performance.
In closing, the hosts emphasize that Canik is already known for solid pistols and that partnering with Taran Butler and Taran Tactical Innovations adds further credibility to the TTI Combat. They describe it as offering strong value for competitive shooters given its features, trigger, compensator, optics-ready slide, and included accessories. They note that few people will have hands-on experience with the pistol at the time of recording but invite future viewers to leave reviews and comments about their experiences. The video ends with a brief sign-off and a reminder to check out the Canik TTI Combat for those interested in a competition-focused 9mm platform.