Bike Pumps
- pbsmick
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Bike Pumps
Postby pbsmick » Fri May 15, 2020 8:34 pm
I just got delivered a Giant Mini Pump 1+ and for some reason the bracket it comes with is off centre??
I tried mounting it on the frame under my seat but it sticks out on the side. I didn't try and go for a ride but I'm sure my leg will rub it.
https://www.giant-bicycles.com/au/control-mini-1plus
Can't think of why they would make a bracket like that??
The pump seems to work ok but my tires say they'll hold between 55-75 (I think) psi and I can only get the pump to go to 40 when the tire seems hard enough and it starts getting hard to pump more air.
Thoughts?
- find_bruce
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Re: Bike Pumps
Postby find_bruce » Fri May 15, 2020 9:35 pm
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Re: Bike Pumps
Postby Nobiker » Sat Mar 26, 2022 10:28 am
Before leaving home always check tyres' pressure.
Carry some CO2 tyre inflators.
Depending on where you are biking, you could pop in a shop.
In public parks sometimes there are free DIY bike service stations, check Google Maps.
At home, I found it stupid spending $50-150 for a silly floor pump so I bought a mini 220V electric pump from Supercheap Auto (no stock right now) for $50 (was on sale).
Another option, you can go to any petrol station.
- P!N20
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Re: Bike Pumps
Postby P!N20 » Tue Mar 29, 2022 4:41 pm
Nobiker wrote: ↑Sat Mar 26, 2022 10:28 am1. Before leaving home always check tyres' pressure.
2. Carry some CO2 tyre inflators.
3. Depending on where you are biking, you could pop in a shop.
4. In public parks sometimes there are free DIY bike service stations, check Google Maps.
5. At home, I found it stupid spending $50-150 for a silly floor pump so I bought a mini 220V electric pump from Supercheap Auto (no stock right now) for $50 (was on sale).
6. Another option, you can go to any petrol station.
1. I usually only check if I'm going for a ride, but each to their own. (boom-tish)
2. Or a mini pump
3. I went into Myer, but just came out with some nice ladies shoes. (boom-tish)
4. Usually on bike paths too.
5. Floor pumps aren't silly.
6. A lot of the modern pumps at service station don't do anywhere near road bike tyre pressures, plus they don't work on presta valves. Yes, you can use an adaptor if you remembered to pack it.
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Re: Bike Pumps
Postby brumby33 » Tue Mar 29, 2022 5:10 pm
![Laughing :lol:](./images/smilies/icon_lol.gif)
brumby33
VWR Patagonia 2017
2003 Diamondback Sorrento Sport MTB
- DavidS
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Re: Bike Pumps
Postby DavidS » Tue Mar 29, 2022 9:12 pm
But, I have this:
![Image](https://www.bikeparts.com/images3/xlarge/PU4300.jpg)
A portable floor pump, now that's far from silly. I have a large floor pump at home and they are great, wouldn't be without it.
They also come in a very elegant colour scheme:
![Image](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0043/1246/5494/products/Product-handpumps-microfldrivexl-y12-zoom1_801d14b9-4e79-4aa4-8816-2477c3f39c5e_1800x1800.jpg?v=1552934909)
DS
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)
- P!N20
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Re: Bike Pumps
Postby wongaga » Wed Mar 30, 2022 3:37 pm
Talk about First World Problems!
- DavidS
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Re: Bike Pumps
Postby DavidS » Wed Mar 30, 2022 8:32 pm
Not sure, never tried, but likely a little long. It does have an attachment to put it on the frame. I carry it in my pannier as I have 2 bikes.
Haven't seen the Topeak, sounds like it is smaller than the Lezyne, pretty impressive by the sound of it.
DS
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Re: Bike Pumps
Postby Mr Purple » Thu Mar 31, 2022 1:18 pm
Just two CO2 cannisters now. Given I've used a total of two in two years I'll accept the environmental impact on my conscience.
Everyone needs a decent track pump at home though. I have no idea why you'd find an electric one easier - it's not particularly hard to pump up a bike tyre manually.
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Re: Bike Pumps
Postby Mike Ayling » Thu Mar 31, 2022 3:27 pm
I have a #4 on our tandem and another #4 on my Thorn Mercury.
Zefal used to claim you could inflate up to 120psi with one of these pumps but with wider tyres 50psi is enough for me now.
Mike
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Re: Bike Pumps
Postby Andy01 » Thu Mar 31, 2022 7:54 pm
Unless you already have an electric workshop compressor in the garage
![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon_biggrin.gif)
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Re: Bike Pumps
Postby JPB » Thu Mar 31, 2022 8:28 pm
I know they are out there and I will probably ask for one for my birthday.
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Re: Bike Pumps
Postby Nobiker » Thu Mar 31, 2022 10:01 pm
And I forgot to mention that I also carry a mini pump and a repair kit.
The electric mini pump that I bought from SupercheapAuto was on a 50% discount so it was a winning choice compared to a $150 "reliable" floor pump.
Consider also that I inflated 2x MTB tires (didn't touch the bike for 4 years) without any issues.
Regarding the CO2 canisters that I probably would never use (touch wood), if I'm the one polluting the environment, I think that all governments around the world should ban the production.
- Gordonhooker
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Re: Bike Pumps
Postby Gordonhooker » Fri Apr 01, 2022 7:56 am
https://www.ryobi.com.au/products/detai ... y-r18dpi-0
- bychosis
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Re: Bike Pumps
Postby bychosis » Fri Apr 01, 2022 4:05 pm
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Re: Bike Pumps
Postby warthog1 » Sun Mar 10, 2024 8:45 pm
BBB doubleshot. Looks interesting.
Still new I think. Anyone heard anything or used one?
hmmm, this bloke was not impressed.
Total rubbish!!!
A completely useless product for serious amateur athletes!
Pro
Design (after all, it won an award for it); but it is completely unimportant!!!
Contra
Function - over 100 pumps for 0.5 bar?!?!! Is that still possible!!!
https://www.galaxus.ch/en/s3/product/bb ... s-23496645
![Wink :wink:](./images/smilies/icon_wink.gif)
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Re: Bike Pumps
Postby CmdrBiggles » Mon Mar 11, 2024 10:39 am
Naturally, whatever I used with my last road bike has long ago vanished during two moving-house events.
The search for a pump before the bike began last November. Eventually landed on a Blackburn CO2'Fer pump; the attendant bracket cannot be fitted to my GIANT downtube due to that tube's big width and squarish shape. No matter; a CO2 canister is stored in my Blackburn seat pack and the pump hitches a ride in my back pocket. Easily gets up to 120psi (which is the limit of my tubeless tyres), easier still with a blast from the cannister.
https://www.blackburndesign.com/p/core- ... 00045.html
The garage has a dedicated Presta-fit Syncros floor pump with bypass bleed that has served both the MTB and e-scooter for several years now.
I have little interest (other than getting a chuckle!) in equipment reviews of people who have not been dedicated cyclists for more than 20 years, as a minimum. Experience counts. Knowledge counts even more, and "reviewers" out to 'make a splash' too often have neither; they're just there to make a silly, unfounded and unqualified comment. The foregoing posts quoting reviews illustrate this!
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Re: Bike Pumps
Postby warthog1 » Mon Mar 11, 2024 2:08 pm
![Sad :(](./images/smilies/icon_sad.gif)
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)
I am after feedback from somebody who has used that one.
I like the look of that doubleshot. Mainly because it is small and will go in a jersey pocket or saddlebag.
Currently using a racerocket hp https://road.cc/content/review/270937-t ... -mini-pump
Largely because it fits in my jersey pocket. If the bbb doubleshot works I will grab one though. Great size.
![Wink :wink:](./images/smilies/icon_wink.gif)
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Re: Bike Pumps
Postby CmdrBiggles » Mon Mar 11, 2024 3:56 pm
warthog1 wrote: ↑Mon Mar 11, 2024 2:08 pmSorry for posting a review on a pump!![]()
![]()
I am after feedback from somebody who has used that one.
I like the look of that doubleshot. Mainly because it is small and will go in a jersey pocket or saddlebag.
Currently using a racerocket hp https://road.cc/content/review/270937-t ... -mini-pump
Largely because it fits in my jersey pocket. If the bbb doubleshot works I will grab one though. Great size.
NO need for a Bendigonian to apologise to a Castlemaniac.
![Laughing :lol:](./images/smilies/icon_lol.gif)
The pump you have with the retractable hose — that is the deal maker for any pump, and a feature you should continue to preference if any replacement is considered. Pumps without a hose will be imparting to-and-fro stress on the valve during the inflation work — something I've always been keen to avoid on any bike. Generally I have less concern about the overall size of a pump (all things considered) and prioritise efficiency and choice of function e.g. not just pump only, but CO2 also.
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Re: Bike Pumps
Postby warthog1 » Mon Mar 11, 2024 4:19 pm
CmdrBiggles wrote: ↑Mon Mar 11, 2024 3:56 pmwarthog1 wrote: ↑Mon Mar 11, 2024 2:08 pmSorry for posting a review on a pump!![]()
![]()
I am after feedback from somebody who has used that one.
I like the look of that doubleshot. Mainly because it is small and will go in a jersey pocket or saddlebag.
Currently using a racerocket hp https://road.cc/content/review/270937-t ... -mini-pump
Largely because it fits in my jersey pocket. If the bbb doubleshot works I will grab one though. Great size.
NO need for a Bendigonian to apologise to a Castlemaniac.![]()
The pump you have with the retractable hose — that is the deal maker for any pump, and a feature you should continue to preference if any replacement is considered. Pumps without a hose will be imparting to-and-fro stress on the valve during the inflation work — something I've always been keen to avoid on any bike. Generally I have less concern about the overall size of a pump (all things considered) and prioritise efficiency and choice of function e.g. not just pump only, but CO2 also.
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)
Went through Castlemaine on todays ride. Then Campbells ck, Fryerstown and Chewton and up past Golden point reservoir. Magic bit of road that!
![Cool 8)](./images/smilies/icon_cool.gif)
I'm tubeless now. Not too worried about valve stress and tbh its' meant less pumping at the side of the road.
Yeah the tube is good, agreed and better than not having one. I'll prob buy one of those BBB pumps and see what it's like, when they are available online.
Yeah got CO2 also.
![Wink :wink:](./images/smilies/icon_wink.gif)
- biker jk
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Re: Bike Pumps
Postby biker jk » Mon Mar 11, 2024 5:02 pm
On my gravel bike, I went with a high volume pump where the head presses onto the valve. As you say, you are unlikely to break tubeless valves by vigorous pumping. However, for my road bikes I chose a pump with a hose and a locking press on head. I avoided the pumps with screw on heads (like Lezyne) which unwind the removable valve core. Suffice to say, there are not many pumps with a hose and a press on head.warthog1 wrote: ↑Mon Mar 11, 2024 4:19 pmCmdrBiggles wrote: ↑Mon Mar 11, 2024 3:56 pmwarthog1 wrote: ↑Mon Mar 11, 2024 2:08 pmSorry for posting a review on a pump!![]()
![]()
I am after feedback from somebody who has used that one.
I like the look of that doubleshot. Mainly because it is small and will go in a jersey pocket or saddlebag.
Currently using a racerocket hp https://road.cc/content/review/270937-t ... -mini-pump
Largely because it fits in my jersey pocket. If the bbb doubleshot works I will grab one though. Great size.
NO need for a Bendigonian to apologise to a Castlemaniac.![]()
The pump you have with the retractable hose — that is the deal maker for any pump, and a feature you should continue to preference if any replacement is considered. Pumps without a hose will be imparting to-and-fro stress on the valve during the inflation work — something I've always been keen to avoid on any bike. Generally I have less concern about the overall size of a pump (all things considered) and prioritise efficiency and choice of function e.g. not just pump only, but CO2 also.
Went through Castlemaine on todays ride. Then Campbells ck, Fryerstown and Chewton and up past Golden point reservoir. Magic bit of road that!![]()
I'm tubeless now. Not too worried about valve stress and tbh its' meant less pumping at the side of the road.
Yeah the tube is good, agreed and better than not having one. I'll prob buy one of those BBB pumps and see what it's like, when they are available online.
Yeah got CO2 also.
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Re: Bike Pumps
Postby warthog1 » Mon Mar 11, 2024 5:13 pm
Yes I have needed the pump more on gravel than road. It is much harder on tyres as you would be aware.biker jk wrote: ↑Mon Mar 11, 2024 5:02 pm
On my gravel bike, I went with a high volume pump where the head presses onto the valve. As you say, you are unlikely to break tubeless valves by vigorous pumping. However, for my road bikes I chose a pump with a hose and a locking press on head. I avoided the pumps with screw on heads (like Lezyne) which unwind the removable valve core. Suffice to say, there are not many pumps with a hose and a press on head.
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)
The race rocket hasn't unscrewed a valve core yet but I can see what a pita that would be.
![Wink :wink:](./images/smilies/icon_wink.gif)
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Re: Bike Pumps
Postby CmdrBiggles » Mon Mar 11, 2024 6:41 pm
warthog1 wrote: ↑Mon Mar 11, 2024 4:19 pm
Went through Castlemaine on todays ride. Then Campbells ck, Fryerstown and Chewton and up past Golden point reservoir. Magic bit of road that!![]()
I'm tubeless now. Not too worried about valve stress and tbh its' meant less pumping at the side of the road.
Yeah the tube is good, agreed and better than not having one. I'll prob buy one of those BBB pumps and see what it's like, when they are available online.
Yeah got CO2 also.
What!? You rode that long route in 37°c+!?
Quelle horreur...
![Shocked :shock:](./images/smilies/icon_eek.gif)
It would be enough for me now to ride from Bendigo to Castlemaine, one way, and hopefully on cruisy flats, maybe a northerly tailwind, then crash somewhere in 'maine for a coffee and chocs — but of course! Even better, porterhouse and chips at the Cumberland. Ahhhh, bewdiful!
![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon_biggrin.gif)
Familiar with the Campbells Creek to Fryerstown route (down Main Road, hard left at Five Flags, up then round then up again and round...), though I would be very surprised if it is popular for cycling of any sort — 25 years ago it was narrow, with no shoulder (just very rough gravel) and cars took up the entire road with no consideration for whatever is coming over the hill or around the bend! So I avoided that over the years and pioneered an MTB route that branched off Fryers Road went past the boundary of the old Dingo Farm (Bruce Jacobson's)... very long, convoluted routing (no longer exists); a bit hazy with the memory now, but it emerged on Fryers Ridge Road and then over the railway bridge at Elphinstone; left turn onto the highway for Chewton, then right to Expedition Pass Reservoir. That was my riding capacity then, when younger!
![Laughing :lol:](./images/smilies/icon_lol.gif)
Meanwhile, on the subject of pumps (ah, finally...
![Laughing :lol:](./images/smilies/icon_lol.gif)
It's just a bulb with gas after all. Some odd rumours about...that CO2 is not welcome in the environment; others still that the bulbs are used for gassing by kids looking for a 'high' — has some cred as I have last week seen discarded bulbs littering the shopping centre car park. I think also roadies could be more considerate of the environment by not just throwing spent bulbs onto the ground after the repair task. There's a lot of this "calling card" visible on local roads.
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Re: Bike Pumps
Postby DavidS » Mon Mar 11, 2024 8:14 pm
Haha, I really don't like the press on heads, always go for a screw head. I have had issues with the very occasional valve (I run tubes) unscrewing, but most valves are fine.biker jk wrote: ↑Mon Mar 11, 2024 5:02 pmOn my gravel bike, I went with a high volume pump where the head presses onto the valve. As you say, you are unlikely to break tubeless valves by vigorous pumping. However, for my road bikes I chose a pump with a hose and a locking press on head. I avoided the pumps with screw on heads (like Lezyne) which unwind the removable valve core. Suffice to say, there are not many pumps with a hose and a press on head.warthog1 wrote: ↑Mon Mar 11, 2024 4:19 pmCmdrBiggles wrote: ↑Mon Mar 11, 2024 3:56 pm
NO need for a Bendigonian to apologise to a Castlemaniac.![]()
The pump you have with the retractable hose — that is the deal maker for any pump, and a feature you should continue to preference if any replacement is considered. Pumps without a hose will be imparting to-and-fro stress on the valve during the inflation work — something I've always been keen to avoid on any bike. Generally I have less concern about the overall size of a pump (all things considered) and prioritise efficiency and choice of function e.g. not just pump only, but CO2 also.
Went through Castlemaine on todays ride. Then Campbells ck, Fryerstown and Chewton and up past Golden point reservoir. Magic bit of road that!![]()
I'm tubeless now. Not too worried about valve stress and tbh its' meant less pumping at the side of the road.
Yeah the tube is good, agreed and better than not having one. I'll prob buy one of those BBB pumps and see what it's like, when they are available online.
Yeah got CO2 also.
Best pump I have had on a bike is the Lezyne mini floor pump, which really is mini and mounts on my bike. Narrow enough to mount on the seat tube inside the crank.
DS
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)
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