Outdoors

Titanium capsule multitool carries tiny lighter, micro-blade and more

View 12 Images
Lighting a fire with the DeepBlue Design Ti-Capsule lighter
DeepBlue Design
The Ti-capsule becomes a tiny EDC pen for all on-the-go writing tasks
DeepBlue Design
Blade holder
DeepBlue Design
The tiny hobby blade won't be useful for everything, but it's good for regular tasks like ripping open packaging
DeepBlue Design
The base of the Ti-capsule includes a 1/4-in bit holder, and the capsule itself can be used to carry three bits
DeepBlue Design
The mini multi-tool comes with an Olfa blade among its tools
DeepBlue Design
A mini kerosene lighter promises to be a handy tool to have in the capsule
DeepBlue Design
We'd be a bit worried about burning our thumb with that tiny lighter so proceed with care
DeepBlue Design
Lighting a fire with the DeepBlue Design Ti-Capsule lighter
DeepBlue Design
The Ti-Capsule can also be used to carry medication and crush larger pills into more swallowable form
DeepBlue Design
The Ti-capsule is compatible with various Olfa blades
DeepBlue Design
Hang the Ti-capsule off a keychain or belt loop
DeepBlue Design
The Ti-capsule comes with a chain to wear it around your neck, if that's your thing
DeepBlue Design
View gallery - 12 images

We've seen modular capsules, bullet tools and keychain pill blades in the past, but Kickstarter DeepBlue Design combines them into something different. Its new multi-tool is a thumb-size titanium capsule that comes with a series of interchangeable tools. Most notable is the kerosene lighter that gives you a reliable fire-starting option that fits in your smallest pocket or dangles from your keychain. Other attachable components include a sharp tape-slicing blade, bit driver and pen. The capsule itself can also serve as a watertight container for pills, tinder, backup cash or other small items.

DeepBlue's modular tool, which we're calling the Ti-capsule, starts out as a 3-in-long (78-mm) titanium capsule measuring 0.63 in (16 mm) in diameter. It has a small keyring hole on the top of the cap and a knurled center for easy cap removal. Once the cap is removed, the base works with DeepBlue's series of modular tools.

A mini kerosene lighter promises to be a handy tool to have in the capsule
DeepBlue Design

The most interesting item in the toolset is the tiny lighter. Lighter multitools are often clunky affairs with blades and files shoved awkwardly into the lighter body, but DeepBlue uses a much sleeker framework. Its tiny kerosene lighter is similar to the keychain minis you can find on Amazon and screws into the capsule base with a sealing O-ring, creating a tiny lighter that's about 2 inches (52 mm) long.

Users can of course swap the lighter out for other implements, including a series of different tiny blades for cutting tasks like slicing through packaging tape and plastic ties. The Ti-capsule comes with the steep-angled Olfa KB/4-S5 blade pictured but is also compatible with similarly sized blades in different shapes and styles.

The mini multi-tool comes with an Olfa blade among its tools
DeepBlue Design

The final implement that comes packaged with the Ti-capsule tool is a pen top that includes a Lamy M22 ink refill.

The very bottom of the capsule maximizes the tool's functionality with a 1/4-in magnetic bit holder. The tool comes with three bits, and users can easily swap in whatever bits are most useful for their own EDC needs. The capsule interior has space to carry three bits.

The base of the Ti-capsule includes a 1/4-in bit holder, and the capsule itself can be used to carry three bits
DeepBlue Design

The Ti-capsule isn't the first tiny multitool with lighter we've seen. In 2021, Septem Studios revealed the Hunt 4.0, a 2.8-in (71-mm) cylinder with kerosene lighter, 120-lumen flashlight and pry bar.

DeepBlue Design is currently offering the Ti-capsule at Kickstarter pledge levels starting at $65, which includes all the tools mentioned and a chain for wearing it around one's neck. The campaign is very close to its $8,000 goal as of publishing, and if things continue along as planned, deliveries will begin in September.

Source: Kickstarter

View gallery - 12 images
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Flipboard
  • LinkedIn
1 comment
BanisterJH
Something tells me that once the knife blades get removed for Air Travel, they don't go back. Olfa doesn't make little hard cases I could find for keeping collections of blades in your checked bag, but their competition does.