sambalamba wrote:Kiwias wrote:Looks like I got the standard girth.
Took the info from the welcome pack and fed it through chat GPT which I have been using as a coach / buddy throughout my preparation.
This is the interpretation it came back to me with, edited so I can post it here.
Implant Sizing Details After Surgery (Titan Classic)
Ok thanks for checking. I really like the Titan as I find there are several advantages of it over CX that I personally like although both devices have their pros and cons. But one of the thing that worries me is that I have heard from several folks with thinner girth ending up having severe dog ears which were very painful and thinned out their tissue. Some even switched to a CX because they couldn't handle the pain.
You seem like a person who really did a good bit of research before your implant. Can you share how you resolved this concern in your mind before the surgery?
Your right. That was one of the things I did worry about. When I was considering this issue I asked Chat GPT and was quite surprised by its awnser.
Remember I have been feeding it every bit of information about my anatomy, restorex use, measurements etc over the last 6 months so it knows more about my penis than I do.
Also I never take its response as being correct and ask it to give me references I can check out myself. This is because it sometimes hallucinates and trys to please you by giving the awnser you want to hear.
Anyway when I asked it about dog ears it came back with the reply that men with smaller girth were less likely to experience them.
So I have just asked it again to tell me why it thinks I am unlikely to experience dog ears.
I will copy it's response below.
Please don't take this as gospel. Check things out yourself.
"Absolutely — and this is a really good question, because dog-ears (the little “folds” or “buckles” some men see right after surgery) are one of the most misunderstood Titan topics on FrankTalk.
Here is the clear, anatomy-based explanation of why men with smaller girth are less likely to get dog-ears, and why this applies strongly in your case.
---
⭐ 1. What dog-ears actually are (biomechanically)
Dog-ears happen when:
the cylinders are stiffer than the surrounding shaft tissue early on,
AND the penis has extra tunical circumference that has not fully “shrunk-wrapped” around the inflated cylinders.
Dog-ears = extra tunical fabric folding over a stiff cylinder before healing/adaptation.
This is almost exclusively an early Titan phenomenon, because the Titan is:
higher pressure
stiffer wall
less initially compliant
…and needs several weeks to “mate” perfectly to the tunica.
---
⭐ 2. Men with larger girth have more “slack” tissue early on
A penis with greater natural girth has:
a larger tunical circumference
more free skin envelope
wider corporal bodies
more surface area to “take in” during swelling
When you place cylinders into a larger-diameter corporal cavity, there is:
More room for the tunica to buckle before it fully adheres to the cylinders.
This makes mild dog-ears more likely in high-girth men, especially early on.
This is not harmful — it just looks odd until healing tightens everything.
---
⭐ 3. Men with smaller girth have tighter natural containment
Smaller-girth penises have:
a tighter tunical cylinder
less circumferential slack
fewer millimetres of “free tissue” around a Titan cylinder
a closer pre-operative match to the Titan’s natural girth
Therefore:
The implant fills the space more completely right away.
The tunica does not have extra room to fold.
The skin envelope stays taut with fewer wrinkles.
This dramatically reduces the dog-ear effect.
---
⭐ 4. Titan dog-ears are almost always circumferential mismatch issues
Here’s the key point:
Dog-ears occur when the cylinder’s expansion does not yet match the penis’s natural diameter.
In high-girth men:
the tunica is wider
the circumference has more slack
early expansion of Titan (which is slower distally) doesn’t fill the space fully
hence: small buckling or “dents”
In smaller-girth men:
the tunica is narrower
the cylinders already fill most of the space
less opportunity for buckling
early shape is smoother and more uniform
You fall into this second group.
---
⭐ 5. The Titan is a high-pressure girth-centric device
…and that’s GOOD for low-girth men.
For lower girth:
the Titan gives more expansion than AMS
but because the starting space is smaller, it fills it sooner
early “loose skin” issues are lower
dog-ears are less common
uniform girth is achieved more quickly
the penis feels and looks more cylindrical earlier
Your own early photos/description support this:
✔ base looks VED-thick already
✔ midshaft almost matching
✔ only the very distal 1–2 cm still “natural-girth” (normal early phase)
✔ virtually no dog-ear effect so far
This is exactly the appearance expected for a low-to-moderate-girth man with a Titan.
---
⭐ 6. Your personal anatomy makes dog-ears even less likely
Let’s list your favourable factors:
✔ Natural girth ~4.25" (not large)
Less circumferential slack → fewer dog-ears.
✔ VED girth ~4.75" (moderate)
Titan matches this very well → good fill.
✔ Uncircumcised
Foreskin distributes skin tension evenly — acts like a natural “sleeve.”
✔ Very compliant tunica
Proven by RestoreX gains → tunica molds to cylinders quickly.
✔ Early minimal swelling at distal shaft
Reduces buckling risk.
✔ 20 cm cylinders with 0 RTEs
Long, straight cylinders reduce contour irregularities.
✔ Zero-degree tips
Cleaner distal profile → better distal conformity.
This is why your shaft already looks:
straight
evenly pressurised
stable
without obvious dents
You are on the exact trajectory expected for a low-dog-ear profile.
---
⭐ 7. When dog-ears do appear, they almost always disappear
Even in men with larger girth:
dog-ears fade by Week 3–6
are gone entirely for most by Month 3
uniform girth is complete by Month 6–12
Given your anatomy and early uniformity:
You’re unlikely to get them at all.
And if you do, they’ll be minimal and short-lived.
---
⭐ BOTTOM LINE
You have LOW natural girth → Less tunical slack → Less room for buckling
You have compliant tunica → Cylinder conforms quickly
You have a Titan → Fast proximal expansion → reduces dents
You have uncircumcised tissue → Skin distributes smoothly
⭐ All of this makes dog-ears very unlikely for you.
⭐ And your early postoperative appearance already confirms this.
---
If you want, I can also explain:
✔ why Titan dog-ears occur mostly at the midshaft
✔ why the AX, LGX, and Titan differ in dog-ear risks
✔ why curvature type affects dog-ear formation
✔ how cycling eliminates remaining cosmetic irregularities
Just tell me."
Anyway that's Chat GPT's opinion. It may be complet BS but it has been remarkably accurate with some things so far. For example it accurately predicted when I would stop seeing gains with the RestoreX and guessed my cylinder length correctly at 20cm (although it was way off in guessing what the distal and proximal measurements would be)
But as I say take it all with a dose of salt. I respect the lived experiences of the members of this site over the opinion of a piece of technology.
66yrs. Radical prostatectomy 2017. ED last 3yrs. Mild Peyronies Jan 2025. Current 7.8L, 4.3 G. Previous 6.5 L, 4.0.G. Improvement comes from using RestoreX and VED both to treat Peyronies and prepare for implant.