Who carries a hand pump??
#1
Who carries a hand pump??
I'd like to carry a small reliable hand pump to air up after leaving trails where air down is beneficial. Also to air up in case of flat. I'm not a fan of the CO2 units. Any of you guys have a pump you carry and like. Thanks.
#2
I found that any hand pump which is small & light enough to easily pack will take forever to get the pressure back up. I prefer to have an electric pump back at the truck, and/or carry a small can of aerosol flatfix for tube failures.
#4
I carry a mountain bike hand pump. No 12V, no CO2, KISS. Yes, it takes a lot of pumping to get a tire up to pressure but it's doable. The only issue might be getting the bead to seat.
It's packed in the MC pack right now so I won't check which make/model. Some sort of Blackburn. I'll try to remember to post the detail next time it sees daylight.
It's packed in the MC pack right now so I won't check which make/model. Some sort of Blackburn. I'll try to remember to post the detail next time it sees daylight.
#5
ol' klx, I use a mountainbike pump too. Those who've used a small bike pump and had trouble with volume and pressure difficulty, I'd say you were using the wrong pump. Topeak makes the Mountain Morph...the one about 12" long with a fat tube. It has enough volume to minimize the time to fill a tire...have you seen the size of some of our mountainbike tires these days?. It has a mechanical advantage design to ease the amount of effort needed, and it has a fold out foot and T-handle to further ease pumping effort. The beauty of a good, small, bike pump is that it is light, and it always works. I think the little 12V pumps are great for road bikes and/or where you don't have as big an issue with the extra weight. I have to carry a minimum of some tools and small parts as it is for true off roading, so the 12V pump is just not on my list.
#6
Check out the Surly Moonwalker. Rivals our MC rear tires.
#8
Scott, I've used CO2 carts for motorcycles and bicycles both over the years. When the replacement of the tube goes relatively without issue, a couple of air carts are sufficient. If you run into any difficulty, you'd better have more carts. A small plastic container of self-sticking patches can get you by if you run into a problem while installing a new tube. On the bike pump...I always go back to the point that it always works and is available over and over again.
#9
I'm interested not just for flat repair, but for a more regular basis of airing up after for the ride home after air down trail stuff. I am getting into some stuff on occasion that is suited for the "air down". But at some point I have a 10-25 mile ride home on hard pack that is suited to higher pressure and lower wear, etc. Once 1 of those little CO2 cylinders is done, if you're not back in business after a flat you may as well grease it up and use it for a suppository, IMO!