Wurkkos TS21 Review (3200 Lumens, SST20 90+ CRI, 21700, USB-C, Anduril 2))

Today I have a fun one that I think you will want to stick around and watch, with the Wurkkos TS21. This is a newish light that Wurkkos has come out with, it’s a compact design, has 3 emitters, runs off a standard 21700 battery, uses the Anduril 2 firmware, and has onboard USB-C charging. Wurkkos did send this to me to look at and review, and they have offered a 20% discount on Amazon which is in the description if you’re interested in picking one up.

Watch this review on YouTube:

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Pickup the Wurkkos TS21 from Amazon and save with the coupons below, or from Wurkkos direct (no coupon)
Gray from Amazon Amazon.com Use code X5KSZIQH to save 20% (Affiliate Link)
Black from Amazon Amazon.com Use code 5SDBMRK8 to save 20% (Affiliate Link)

Wurkkos also offers these direct, with some additional accessories too like a 20350 tube, and diffuser.

Packaging & Accessories
Wurkkos has a pleasant but basic white box with orange ends that largely displays their name in the middle. On the side is a sticker telling you what model you have inside, body color as well as emitter choice. Inside the light was in bubble wrap and continued the 5000mAh 21700 battery, pocket clip, Lanyard, extra orings, a USB-A to C Charging cable, and literature.



Construction & Design
The TS21 is made from aluminum and in anodized in a variety of colors. It’s currently available in Champagne (A metallic tan color), Metal Gray, Black, Red (What I have here), and a splatter camouflage. The anodizing here is god, but I have noticed my red isn’t super durable, this isn’t uncommon with aluminum anodizing because black is the most durable color available.



The tailcap is flat, and magnetic, not super strong but enough to hold the weight of the light. The lanyard hole is an eyelet and is a little sharp. The body tube is nicely scalloped and completely reversible. It has groves milled in to accept the pocket clip on either end.


The head grows in side, and contains minimal heat syncing. The button press feels about what you would expect from an eswitch, but the button itself kind of rattles around some, not the best feeling in the world. There are LED indicators under the switch that are used to show the charge status, and act as a locator LED. They go Red, Blue, and Amber in color. At the front there is a stainless steel bezel with large but shallow crenulations, a glass lens and a triple TIR optic. Note this isn’t the standard size you have seen in other lights like the FW3A, etc, it’s slightly larger.


Thread are anodized, square cut and nicely lubricated from the factory. Internally, the front is just a button contact, out the rear there is a large gold coated spring, and the tail cap is magnetic. It’s just strong enough to hold the light on a painted metal surface with a slight amount of slippage.

Retention
Retention options are the dual direction pocket clip, which allows you to put the light on a hat and run a makeshift headlamp, or use more traditionally as a pocket clip. It’s reasonably deep carry and will mount on the rear or front of the light. Your lanyard attachment points are either on the tailcap of the light, or on the pocket clip. As mentioned the mount on the tailcap is a little sharp and can be a hot spot for larger hands. Speaking of fit in the hands it’s pretty good, It’s a reasonably compact design and provides a modest amount of grip.

Size & Weight
I measured the TS21 at 113.3mm (4.46”) in length, maximum diameter at the head at 28mm (1.1”) and minimum diameter on the body at 26.06mm (1.02”). Weight with the battery and clip installed came in at 158.7g or 5.10oz. The light is IPX water rated and here it is compared with a few similar style lights and the popular Wurkkos FC11.


LED & Beam
The TS21 has 3 Luminus SST-20 Emitters, mine shipped with the 4000k tint but 5000k and 6000k are also available. These are behind a narrow TIR optic and it creates a very nice narrow semi floody beam. It’s a very practical and useful beam for a variety of tasks in my opinion. The bezel does interfere ever so slightly at short ranges with the very outside of the spill with the narrow optics here. With my not so scientific Opple meter I registered 3780k with 95 CRI. You have to take those CRI numbers with a grain of salt, but they are high enough to consider “high CRI” for me. It’s a pleasant warmer tint.





Officially Wurkkos rates this as making 3500 lumens with 217M of throw. That may be a little optimistic with these specific warmer LED’s and I suspect they achieved this using the cooler tint LED’s that typically have a small performance advantage. This is a FET driving light and there is PWM here, it’s how ramping is achieved. It’s not noticeable to the eye for me but my equipment can pick it up. Personally I didn’t notice any whining during ramping. For me Turbo pulled 7.8A at the tailcap with the included battery, so you don’t need a particularly high drain battery for this light. See my night shots section of the video version of this review for a full demonstration of the beam and some comparison with other lights.

Heat & Runtime
So for my heat and runtime tests I used the included Wurkkos branded (standard non proprietary) 5000mAh flat top battery. I calibrated the light to a 60C and ran two rounds of tests. The graphs are using the FL1 standard so 100% of relative output is taken at the 30 second mark. First was my standard Turbo test, where I take the light to its absolute top output and just let it go. In doing this I saw the light almost immediately start stepping down at about 25 seconds it then ran at about 100% output for a minute and a half as heat peaked just under 50C. This makes me rethink my thermal calibration may need to be revisited. I won’t lie if I said I didn’t struggle with this a bit. Anyways output continues to decrease and it stabilizes between 30-45% of relative output for another nearly 4 hours. Total runtime down to 1% relative output was just shy of 5 hours.

I then ran a runtime which was the top of the default ramp curve. For this is was able to sustain 100% relative output for a little longer and the total output graph was pretty similar. Active thermal management shows itself in both modes well with the light increasing output as it cools even though the battery voltage is declining. This is something Anduril does well. LVP was measured at 2.994V.

UI
The TS21 when it came out originally came with the Anduril 1.0 firmware by Toykeeper, but they are now shipping it with Anduril 2.0. This is my first light with Anduril 2.0 so it had a bit of a learning curve. I won’t pretend to be an Anduril expert, but I will say the diagram on how to navigate the light is absolutely critical to learning it and doing more advanced settings like setting the thermal calibration which I highly recommend doing.

The light ships in Simple UI mode and this is a benefit of Anduril 2.0 as it’s your basic flashlight functions like turning on, increasing and decreasing brightness, battery check and lockout. It’s much easier to not end up in an advanced mode or get lost. Much better for more novice users or someone who wants something easier, that said it’s not calibrated so you can expect your runtimes to be less, especially at high outputs.

Your basic functions are ramping (Which can be switched to steps with 3 Clicks once on), double press to go to top of ram (Technically not turbo). In advanced mode you have the full range of features including all the blinking modes, changing the color of the auxiliary channel which on the TS21 is on the button, etc. You can see I somehow unintentionally turned my button LED to be on all the time in orange. You can of course go in and disable this. I think in time as I use Anduril 2 more I will like it but right now it’s a little confusing and not muscle memory yet.

Recharging
Recharging is done via the onboard USB-C charging port built into the light. The silicone port cover here fits well but is rounded so it does help it roll on it’s side. A note on the battery here, it’s a flat top 21700 that’s non proprietary which is fantastic to see. The light supports charging via USB-C PD but doesn’t benefit from a speed increase as a result.


Recharging from LVP at 2.994v to full at 4.17v took 2:53:00 at a maximum of 1.85A at the very beginning of charging, with the bulk of charging a bit lower then that. This is well under 1C for this battery and safe for long term use.

Final Thoughts
Wurkkos has made their name in offering quality lights that appeal to enthusiasts at affordable prices and the TS21 is no different. It’s nice and compact, I don’t generally EDC a 21700 light because of it’s size but this is small and compact enough that I would if I was anticipating needing the output or runtime here. Because of that size though and this having 3 emitters it does build heat quickly and ramps down. This may be a slight disappointment if your not used to that, my advice would be to calibrate the light, raise that ceiling but also don’t run the light on the maximum output if you don’t need it.

Multiple body color options from launch, LED Tint choices including warm, neutral tints, and high CRI are great to see at this price range. The number of manufactures that offer this keep declining and I think it’s an important feature. I hope consumers appreciate this complexity this adds to production and inventory with lots of additional SKU’s.

Anduril is an enthusiasts UI for sure, it’s not super simple, but Anduril 2 with it’s separation of simple UI from Advanced UI improves this so it’s still a easy to use flashlight if you want it to be without all the complications, but those power features are there too if you want. Just make sure you have a diagram handy if you want to venture into the Advanced UI.

So I can recommend this one both to new users, and enthusiasts. It’s a compact light with good performance, emitter tint options, high CRI, and body colors with onboard charging. This updated version I tested here today is a good way to try out Anduril 2 if you don’t have a light with it. With the coupons Wurkkos has provided I can get the light shipped to me for under $40 next day with a battery, which I think is a great deal.

Edit: I received my new fuses today and measured the parasitic drain at 11.61mA with the switch on high, so quite high drain. This light is easy to mechanically lock out with a slight twist of the tail cap.

Great info, photos, beamshots, Opple data, and runtime charts.

Very thorough and informative review.

Thanks I updated what I could, and added it to my personal dictionary to hopefully avoid that. Spelling was never a great subject for me :slight_smile:

Thanks for the review.

Your video (at 15 minutes 30 seconds) states the TS21 uses the same version of Anduril-2 as the Sofirn SP36 and Q8. I do not have any of those recent lights (mine are all the older Anduril-1 versions), but my two newer Sofirn IF25A lights with Anduril-2 (purchased at different times) both report "2021 06 06 0612" from the "15 Clicks while OFF" Version Check, indicating a "June 6, 2021" version and a "0612" model number. I am curious which version date of Anduril-2 is used on the recent TS21 and also what "Model Number" is reported by the version check.

Could you please post what your TS21 reports from the "15 Clicks while OFF" Version Check?

Also, it appears from reading the descriptions in the AmazonUS links provided, that only the "Gray Colored" TS21 uses Anduril-2 and that the "Black Colored" TS21 lights use Anduril-1.

Do you know if both the "Gray Colored" and "Black Colored" TS21 lights listed in the AmazonUS links you provided are both delivered with Anduril-2 at this time?

Thanks again for the review. I need another light like I need a hole-in-the-head and I doubt the TS21 can plug that hole, but if I do purchase one, I would prefer it used Anduril-2.

My version of Anduril is reporting as 2021-06-06 0612 same as yours.

I got a message back from Sofirn and your correct some of the black lights on Amazon are the older version with Andruil 1. They said all of the lights being sold from their website are Andruil 2.

I think my latest splatter Blue (released in January 2022) is reporting the same FW version.

Thanks for the review. There are several threads here on the forum discussing the various problems with TS21 and Anduril 2, including high parasitic drain (around 13mA) when the switch led is set to high, and randomly turning on the blue light on the switch. Would it be possible to check if any of these problems still exist on your sample? Thank you.

Yes, but with a caveat. I intended to test the drain but my better multimeter with that setting has blown fuses and 6x25mm fuses are not so common in the US. I have new ones on order that should be here later this week hopefully. I have the light at my desk and my switch button is orange and on all the time. I suspect this is part of the high drain. As far as I know they haven’t fixed the drain issue.

Whoa! Where’d you get the bloodsplatter-camo ones? Are those legit for sale?

Me want!

I have the blood splatter Blue one but the Camo is on their website

https://wurkkos.com/products/wurkkos-ts21-new-color-metal-gray-and-champagne-with-anduril-20-21700-led-flashlight-3sst20-3500lm?VariantsId=10139

Since TS21 comes with 2021-06 firmware, features added after that date to Anduril 2 code base are NOT available for this light. For example full Ramp Extras Config or the ability to treat 1H as 10C during the configuration are missing from this light even though generic Anduril 2 documentation and flow chart shows them.

As I believe has been stated elsewhere, the parasitic drain will not be fixed until a new batch is built. Parasitic drain is NOT a problem at the default setting of low. At the low level, the light in the switch is barely visible in the daylight. However, at night, it is quite easy to see and, when the light is on and a a level higher than the top of regulation the light does get brighter making a clear indication that the light is operating above regulated level. The blue light comes on when the voltage changes quickly. This can appear very random. Only stays on for 30 seconds.

If you need a brighter switch light with low parasitic drain it will be a while before this may be dealt with. New parts required. Most likely the blue light thing will be fixed at that time as well. If a blue light coming on in the switch for 30 seconds for apparently random reasons bothers you, you will need to wait. Of course there may be some V1s still available. I’ve had both and they are both fine lights. Probably lean a touch more to the V2 myself even with the quirky switch light as I prefer Andruil 2 vs 1. Not a huge deal to me either way.

Great to have this forum so people know what to expect! Just because the switch thing isn’t more than a minor annoyance to me doesn’t mean that it may be a deal breaker for someone else. For me, at the price, it is a very very nice light! Have been EDCing it for a while now. Really doesn’t bother in jeans pocket. Mostly don’t know it is there. Accidental activation has not been a problem but I can see how it could happen. The beam profile, as shown in the review, is truly outstanding. Love the tint and CRI. Was thinking that it is a bit on the short side for throwing. However, on further observation, it throws much better than it appears. It puts out such a massive wall of light that the distance it covers ends up being deceiving. The operation of the switch has been very consistent and easy to operate in winter gloves. This alone is worth more to me than the bugs outlined above. It also has a truly useful moonlight. One thing that doesn’t get a lot of mention is just how good the included cell is. Very low IR and meets the capacity rating. So much to like for such a reasonable price. Not dissing anyone who is truly bothered by the switch issues. Just sayin that there are so many outstanding things about this light and for those of us who do not need a brighter switch light it is just not much of an issue.

I agree with that you wrote, for most ppl it’s not a deal breaker, I would just prefer to have it without the bugs.
Also I think, as a matter of informing the crowd here, that it would be good to call them out on each and every thread about this light, so that they actually produce a new batch.

Hence my question to the OP, if he can measure it, since as far as I can see nowhere on the pictures or video it’s shown with the blue light in the switch, also his one is the newest one as far as I can see here in the forum. One can hope.

I had a champagne TS21 from Amazon ordered around 1/15/2022, and it has the blue light problem. Curiously, my Sofirn SP36 BLF 4000k also has the same blue light problem. In both, Manual Memory one-click-to-turbo mode gets rid of the blue light.

Hard to recommend Wurkkos when Sofirn IF25a has same LED (actually one more, 4 total) and does everything better - brighter, better throw, no need to up adjust thermal limit, flat switch that’s less likely to activate accidentally. Without these little bugs with TS21.

That seems fair. However, not sure I would say does everything better. Does not appear to even have a clip. Would need to add that. The larger head probably would make pants pocket EDC uncomfortable at best. As a light for a jacket pocket or similar I might agree with you. For what it is in terms of EDC I think the scale, even with the quirks, is tilted towards the TS21

Yes, I have two of IF25A’s, so was comparing the TS21 to it. I have to say I like the shape of TS21 more. But what I lack on IF25A is the power bank feature, which the TS21 has. That’s a great saver when packing for the outdoors…

Good points. My champagne Wurkkos is also very pretty to look at :-).

Actually my main problem with TS21 is not the blue light or parasitic drain etc., but the brightness and throw. Once I see the beam of Sofirn 25, I couldn’t go back. The better throw and brightness of Sofirn makes it more useful for me in my daily evening walk. Interesting that what makes the IF25a less fluid looking (the larger head) is also what allows it to squeeze in one extra emitter, and not sure but possibly better heat dissipation (no need to increase thermal limit).

My concern with the TS21’s small form is that maybe it’s just not meant for 3 low CCT high CRI LED’s and that’s why we have to increase thermal limit. BTW I measured external temp with IR gun of Thrunite T2 that has highly efficient Cree XP70.2 and it read 41C versus Wurkkos at 47C. Sofirn was around 46.

That’s why if I have some purpose (vs generic EDCing) I carry multiple lights vs a compromise “try to do everything” light. :laughing:

Hell, even a GTmicro has decent reach and almost disappears in a pocket.

But yeah, when I grabbed a bunch of lights to have a “shootout” one night really quick (was out east), my ’micro was pretty decent lighting up trees across a parking lot, my Catapult mini was a lot brighter and throwier that far out, but damn, my ’22A had a wider hotspot, but with all that extra oomf, outshined all the others that far away.

I should’ve brought my Anekims to see how they fared. Both use those CSI.NY emitters, one green and one white, and both have good brightness and a pinpoint hotspot which was impressive af when I tried it one late-night in the backyard, hitting the trees on the next block.

You have me ponder whether I want or I need a IF22A (if that’s what you’re talking about). Thanks a lot. :innocent:
The bad thing about this hobby is things are not too expensive. So easy to yield to temptation.
The good thing is the same, things are not too expensive!

Barry Lee told me there won’t be SFT40 @ 4000k. So what’s available now is it.

I gifted a couple of IF22As because I think it is really a remarkable light. My friends, who live in the country, are very impressed with it. Too cool for me but the beam is perfect for what it is IMO. Thing is I live in the city now so I just don’t really have any use for it. The hot spot is not pencil tight but it is definitely pronounced. IIRC at 50 yards it would pretty much make the side of a house (roughly 30 feet) completely illuminated. At a couple of hundred yards it is way more impressive. No comparison at all to a C8 and that is the throwiest light I have. You can see so much better at distance with the IF22A. I just don’t have a need for that at the moment.