I have to admit I struggle to see the point of Ni/Titanium
With 26G Titanium & 30G Ni200, the Titanium never participates in the power flow, so it's identical to Ni200/Kanthal, with the Titanium just being an extra wire for flavour/stability in which case I'd think Kanthal is superior as it's probably cheaper and possibly easier to work with.
It is interesting to note that with certain combinations of Titanium/Ni200, it's possible for the active/power wire to switch over as the coil heats. 25G (0.45mm) Titanium with 32G (0.2mm) Ni200 would, at 10 wraps of 2mm dual coil, give a base Ni200 resistance of 0.123Ω and Titanium of 0.143Ω.
But by the time the combined wire temp reached about 100°C / 212°F, the Titanium would have lower resistance than the Ni200 and from that point onwards, it would be Titanium's TCR that was active for the resistance rise.
So it would be the Titanium profile that would be most accurate for the target temp and anything above 212°F, but the wire would reach 212 on Ni200's curve. How noticeable that would be in the final accuracy I'm not sure.
Anyway that's not happening with the combination of 26G Ti / 30G Ni200. And nor would it happen with most combos - if you go further in the other direction, eg 24G Ti / 32G Ni200, then Titanium has the lower resistance throughout, so it will always be accurate with a Titanium TC profile. (Maybe 24G TI + 30G or 31G Ni200 might show the same effect, I can't be bothered to run the numbers again to check.)
I still can't really see a reason to use Ni200/Titanium, as to me it seems it's at best going to be identical in effect to Ni200/Kanthal, and at worst adds some (minor) downsides like cost and perhaps wire strength (I feel like Titanium breaks easier than Kanthal of the same gauge but I've not thoroughly tested it, and that might be related to annealed Titanium which perhaps the Spider stuff is not.)
Anyway if you've got 26G Titanium and not 26K Kanthal, or have more Titanium than you'll ever use, then why not