Franklin22 wrote:This may be a dumb question, but how do you know when you are 100% inflated vs 85% you just check the ruler ? Or is there a magic number of pumps you have figured out?
I’m scheduled for a titan implant in less than a month with Clavell and around 4.5 inches girth. I’ve heard the titan can increase girth on lesser girth guys?
Not a dumb question at all. Estimation of an implant's degree of inflation is important for consistent evaluation of one's own progress and for communication with and comparison to other men. It is a difficult exercise, though; look at the debate over how to measure length for an even more problematic example.
Here is what I do:
I count myself 100% inflated when I cannot pump any more fluid into my implant.
Squeezing the bulb results in no increase in rigidity and compression/movement of the bulb is minimal, even with maximum effort.
I count myself 50% inflated when (during deflation) the backflow from the implant into the reservoir stops by itself.
I figure that is when the pressure in the reservoir and the implant have equalized with each other. (Further deflation requires squeezing my penis. I have an AMS pump that came with my AMS LGX. Coloplast pumps have a different design and the deflation process and estimation of when equalization has occurred may be more difficult to ascertain. Probably easier to determine with their "One Touch" than with their "Genesis" pumps, I guess.)
I count myself as 0% inflated or 100% deflated when I cannot (no matter how much I squeeze, fold, squash, squish etc) cause any more backflow into the reservoir.
At that point, my penis is pretty pitiful-looking. not tubular and with flat spots evident. Still longer than my pre-implant flaccid, but definitely floppy. (Coloplast-implanted men, because Coloplast uses their bioflex material will not be floppy.)
In-between those three (0%, 50% and 100%) reference points are estimations.
Caveat:
I am not, nor have I ever been, an engineer in the employ of any implant manufacturer, so this paragraph is to be taken as theoretical.
Counting pumps to make comparisons with other men or gauge one's own inflation degree is difficult because depth of the pump-bulb squeeze is difficult to do consistently; but one can try. There is also this: As the pressure goes up, fluid transfer WILL go down even with the same amount of squeeze because there is flexibility in the system. So, a squeeze that used to push "X" cc will push "X-y" cc where "y" is due to stretch of the connecting tubes and backflow of the one-way valving. "y" is minimal or zero, of course, in the early pumping but greater as the pressure increases. I note that, at 100% inflated, I can pump (tiny depressions in the pump bulb) 10, 20, 50, 100 pumps with no change in my implant.
By the way, as to the original question, being sore at full inflation. At and a half years I still get sore in my glans if I remain inflated 100% for more than an hour or so. At two years, I got sore at 30 minutes. As the teure of my implant increases, the length of time to soreness also increases. On the good side, it is a self-limiting feature. I can go to sleep fully inflated and the soreness will wake me up before tissue compression could be a factor.