Who carries a hand pump??

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
  #1  
Old 01-06-2013 | 11:05 PM
ShadetreeAZ's Avatar
Thread Starter
|
Senior Member
1st Gear Member
Joined: May 2012
Posts: 128
From: North Central Arizona
Cool 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  
Old 01-06-2013 | 11:11 PM
go cytocis's Avatar
Senior Member
1st Gear Member
Joined: Mar 2011
Posts: 695
Default

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.
 
  #3  
Old 01-06-2013 | 11:22 PM
DYNOBOB's Avatar
Senior Member
Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 304
From: Cincinnati, OH
1st Gear Member
Default

I carry the small Slime 12v pump that plugs into battery tender port.


.
 
  #4  
Old 01-06-2013 | 11:49 PM
ol'klx-er's Avatar
Senior Member
Joined: Jan 2010
Posts: 1,800
From: kootenay country BC Canada
1st Gear Member
Default

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.
 
  #5  
Old 01-07-2013 | 12:34 AM
TNC's Avatar
TNC
Senior Member
Joined: Sep 2009
Posts: 5,050
From: Abilene, TX
1st Gear Member
Default

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.
 
Attached Thumbnails Who carries a hand pump??-mountain-morph.jpg  
  #6  
Old 01-07-2013 | 01:15 AM
ol'klx-er's Avatar
Senior Member
Joined: Jan 2010
Posts: 1,800
From: kootenay country BC Canada
1st Gear Member
Talking

Originally Posted by TNC
...have you seen the size of some of our mountainbike tires these days?. ..
Yes, they rival the size of our MC fronts.
Check out the Surly Moonwalker. Rivals our MC rear tires.
 
  #7  
Old 01-07-2013 | 01:19 AM
IDRIDR's Avatar
Senior Member
Joined: Oct 2010
Posts: 4,507
From: SW Idaho
1st Gear Member
Default

I'm interested to know why you all aren't fans of the CO2 units. I carry one, with three cartridges, but have never needed it (knock on wood).
 
  #8  
Old 01-07-2013 | 01:31 AM
TNC's Avatar
TNC
Senior Member
Joined: Sep 2009
Posts: 5,050
From: Abilene, TX
1st Gear Member
Default

Originally Posted by IDRIDR
I'm interested to know why you all aren't fans of the CO2 units. I carry one, with three cartridges, but have never needed it (knock on wood).
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  
Old 01-07-2013 | 02:06 AM
ShadetreeAZ's Avatar
Thread Starter
|
Senior Member
1st Gear Member
Joined: May 2012
Posts: 128
From: North Central Arizona
Default

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!
 
  #10  
Old 01-07-2013 | 02:33 AM
ol'klx-er's Avatar
Senior Member
Joined: Jan 2010
Posts: 1,800
From: kootenay country BC Canada
1st Gear Member
Exclamation

CO2 cartridges cause global warming, dontcha know.
 


Quick Reply: Who carries a hand pump??



All times are GMT. The time now is 12:18 PM.