Mini pump lesson
#1
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Mini pump lesson
I rarely flat and in fact I was going on at least 2 years since last flat and over 12,000 miles. So of course I did have one a few days ago and out some 22 miles in county from home. No problem put the spare tube on and go. Well turns out my spare tube had seem split. Possible from being in the saddle bag for past 2 plus years and getting hit by one of my mini tools. Value stem pretty rusted too. Well I don't carry a patch kit although I might start. My problem was the first tube with the flat was a slower leak. My mini pump which I have used a few times and practiced takes a huge amount of work and strokes (200 strokes)to get to at the most 55 psi. That is rideable but not really good. I finally had to call the ride of shame home.
So now I am going be prepared. I have CO2 but that can have issues and I do carry co2 but have a mini pump. Well I not big on co2 since at times seating the tire can happen so fast in does not work. I have also had the cold get my hands by not being smart. My solution is just get a decent smaller frame pump. So I ordered a Lezyne Road Drive it has flexible hose and based on reviews seems like it will be fine. Then I am thinking of taking 2 tubes with me on rides as the pump I can mount under bottlle cage. I still can throw in a co2 cartridge but I still find them tricky and I am a mechanic.
I wonder if any of the forum uses a Lezyen and some of the strategy they use for flats. In my case I just don't flat enough to make a full go of covering all the bases. This to me would be patch kit and a full frame pump that easily goes to 100 psi. One would hope 2 tubes are ok and if they fail............well make sure you have the cell phone.
So now I am going be prepared. I have CO2 but that can have issues and I do carry co2 but have a mini pump. Well I not big on co2 since at times seating the tire can happen so fast in does not work. I have also had the cold get my hands by not being smart. My solution is just get a decent smaller frame pump. So I ordered a Lezyne Road Drive it has flexible hose and based on reviews seems like it will be fine. Then I am thinking of taking 2 tubes with me on rides as the pump I can mount under bottlle cage. I still can throw in a co2 cartridge but I still find them tricky and I am a mechanic.
I wonder if any of the forum uses a Lezyen and some of the strategy they use for flats. In my case I just don't flat enough to make a full go of covering all the bases. This to me would be patch kit and a full frame pump that easily goes to 100 psi. One would hope 2 tubes are ok and if they fail............well make sure you have the cell phone.
#2
Expired Member
The Lezyne is a nice pump but the screw on hose can be tricky. You may want to practice at home. I find it easiest to screw the hose to the valve, then screw the pump to the hose. I also carry one spare tube, a few Park stick on patches and a CO2 with a control valve so it's not all or nothing. It's good to carry the tube in a zip lock or a sock for protection. Thinking that could be a good use for all those cycling socks that are too short to be worn this year.
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#3
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Yes, lots of thumbs up for the Road Drive minipump. Before I went tubeless, I'd puncture every so often and never had an issue with it. For longer rides I'd take 2 tubes and 1 or 2 CO2 cartridges along with a PDW Shiny Object, one of each on shorter rides. I'd take a repair kit in case all the tubes punctured, but that's never happened.
#4
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I love my specialized Road Air Mini so much i'm Tempted to buy 2 more so i don't ever run out. Easily gets a 28c tyre to 80psi when im out of co2, pefect for the initial seat of a tyre and dissapears in your jersey pocket
#5
Senior Member
#6
Senior Member
I got a co2 inflator and pump for our tandem none setup for shreader and of course we discovered that when we had a flat. lucky only a mile from home.
#7
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Glueless patches are good insurance against a dud spare tube.
https://www.parktool.com/product/super-patch-kit-gp-2
https://www.parktool.com/product/super-patch-kit-gp-2
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#8
Senior Member
With the Lezyne, make sure you push the little button when finished pumping and before unscrewing; otherwise, you might unscrew the presta valve stem.
I carry both pump and O2. If it is raining and cold, I start the tube using the pump to make sure it is seated properly and then blast it up with the O2
I carry both pump and O2. If it is raining and cold, I start the tube using the pump to make sure it is seated properly and then blast it up with the O2
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#9
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https://www.amazon.com/Pro-Bike-Tool...a-851818876967
I flatted and the replacement tube in my bag (stupid me) had a SHORT STEM so it did not protrude very far past the rim ???? NO PROBLEM because the inflator SCREWS ONTO THE VALVE providing a secure and TIGHT fit.
p.s. - I carry 16g cartridges so plenty of CO2
Last edited by OldTryGuy; 05-12-21 at 06:16 AM.
#10
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Hey pump update, I got the Lezyne Road Drive in mail today and it is a great pump compared to the garbage thing I had. I tried this out on a deflated tire and easy 100 pumps to around 65-70 psi. That actually is enough but I did see about what I could do and maybe another 100 without huge work I got to 92 psi that is plenty and all I ride at times. I could have gone over 100 but certainly not worth the trouble. I got a set of glueless patches with it but I have never used the glueless ones do they work as decent as traditional cement and patch?
Finally in the interest of ease I found some Kenda tubes 4 for $26 on ebay 48m treaded value. Very good deal and now I really see no reason for the CO2 in fact pumping maybe really be as easy and not cold. The pump is machine nice and could go in a back jersey pocket I got the medium length but I put it under the cage. Carry 2 tubes in a saddle bag.
Finally in the interest of ease I found some Kenda tubes 4 for $26 on ebay 48m treaded value. Very good deal and now I really see no reason for the CO2 in fact pumping maybe really be as easy and not cold. The pump is machine nice and could go in a back jersey pocket I got the medium length but I put it under the cage. Carry 2 tubes in a saddle bag.
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#11
I run tubeless at around 70 psi which makes life much easier for my mini-pump. This reminds me to test my pump and check my emergency tube at least once a year because I can't remember the last time I had a flat!
#12
Senior Member
Thread Starter
I have the chrome Lezyne frame pump. It has the hose. I line my screw on to the presta valve. hold pump up in a vertical position and actually use the body of the pump to screw the head onto the valve. Kind of like a long screwdriver.
Pump works ok. Has a built in 90 psi alert feature. When I get to about 90, the barrel gets so hot, I can't hold the heated barrel in my hand any longer. I've tested it at home several times and found I can get to about 90.
Pump works ok. Has a built in 90 psi alert feature. When I get to about 90, the barrel gets so hot, I can't hold the heated barrel in my hand any longer. I've tested it at home several times and found I can get to about 90.
Last edited by deacon mark; 05-13-21 at 06:56 PM.
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#13
Senior Member
Gravel bike: pump, spare tubes, CO2, boot kit, plug tool.
Road bike: pump and spare tubes and cell phone if that doesn't work.
Road bike: pump and spare tubes and cell phone if that doesn't work.
#14
Expired Member
I carry CO2 mostly so that people don't have to wait longer if I flat on a group ride. More than once I've given cartridges to fellow riders who got fumble fisted with their own CO2. Just depends on circumstances, options are good.
#15
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Glueless patches are good insurance against a dud spare tube.
https://www.parktool.com/product/super-patch-kit-gp-2
https://www.parktool.com/product/super-patch-kit-gp-2
But then the pre-glued patches will probably dry up as well, given enough time.
__________________
"This 7:48 cycling session burned 5933 calories. Speed up recovery by replacing them with a healthy snack." - Whoop
"This 7:48 cycling session burned 5933 calories. Speed up recovery by replacing them with a healthy snack." - Whoop
#16
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I rarely flat and in fact I was going on at least 2 years since last flat and over 12,000 miles. So of course I did have one a few days ago and out some 22 miles in county from home. No problem put the spare tube on and go. Well turns out my spare tube had seem split. Possible from being in the saddle bag for past 2 plus years and getting hit by one of my mini tools. Value stem pretty rusted too. Well I don't carry a patch kit although I might start. My problem was the first tube with the flat was a slower leak. My mini pump which I have used a few times and practiced takes a huge amount of work and strokes (200 strokes)to get to at the most 55 psi. That is rideable but not really good. I finally had to call the ride of shame home.
So now I am going be prepared. I have CO2 but that can have issues and I do carry co2 but have a mini pump. Well I not big on co2 since at times seating the tire can happen so fast in does not work. I have also had the cold get my hands by not being smart. My solution is just get a decent smaller frame pump. So I ordered a Lezyne Road Drive it has flexible hose and based on reviews seems like it will be fine. Then I am thinking of taking 2 tubes with me on rides as the pump I can mount under bottlle cage. I still can throw in a co2 cartridge but I still find them tricky and I am a mechanic.
I wonder if any of the forum uses a Lezyen and some of the strategy they use for flats. In my case I just don't flat enough to make a full go of covering all the bases. This to me would be patch kit and a full frame pump that easily goes to 100 psi. One would hope 2 tubes are ok and if they fail............well make sure you have the cell phone.
So now I am going be prepared. I have CO2 but that can have issues and I do carry co2 but have a mini pump. Well I not big on co2 since at times seating the tire can happen so fast in does not work. I have also had the cold get my hands by not being smart. My solution is just get a decent smaller frame pump. So I ordered a Lezyne Road Drive it has flexible hose and based on reviews seems like it will be fine. Then I am thinking of taking 2 tubes with me on rides as the pump I can mount under bottlle cage. I still can throw in a co2 cartridge but I still find them tricky and I am a mechanic.
I wonder if any of the forum uses a Lezyen and some of the strategy they use for flats. In my case I just don't flat enough to make a full go of covering all the bases. This to me would be patch kit and a full frame pump that easily goes to 100 psi. One would hope 2 tubes are ok and if they fail............well make sure you have the cell phone.
Last edited by Litespud; 05-14-21 at 07:19 AM.
#18
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Hey pump update, I got the Lezyne Road Drive in mail today and it is a great pump compared to the garbage thing I had. I tried this out on a deflated tire and easy 100 pumps to around 65-70 psi. That actually is enough but I did see about what I could do and maybe another 100 without huge work I got to 92 psi that is plenty and all I ride at times. I could have gone over 100 but certainly not worth the trouble. I got a set of glueless patches with it but I have never used the glueless ones do they work as decent as traditional cement and patch?
Finally in the interest of ease I found some Kenda tubes 4 for $26 on ebay 48m treaded value. Very good deal and now I really see no reason for the CO2 in fact pumping maybe really be as easy and not cold. The pump is machine nice and could go in a back jersey pocket I got the medium length but I put it under the cage. Carry 2 tubes in a saddle bag.
Finally in the interest of ease I found some Kenda tubes 4 for $26 on ebay 48m treaded value. Very good deal and now I really see no reason for the CO2 in fact pumping maybe really be as easy and not cold. The pump is machine nice and could go in a back jersey pocket I got the medium length but I put it under the cage. Carry 2 tubes in a saddle bag.
#19
Senior Member
Thread Starter
In theory it sounds good but assumes every stroke is full and consistent. It assumes no loss when hose taken off to check pressure with gage and the loss of air in that process. Frankly it makes no difference I just want to get over 80psi easily. This does it problem solved. I still have 23mm conti gp5000 but going to 25 so pressure high even less important.
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A temporary fix at best.
#21
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In theory it sounds good but assumes every stroke is full and consistent. It assumes no loss when hose taken off to check pressure with gage and the loss of air in that process. Frankly it makes no difference I just want to get over 80psi easily. This does it problem solved. I still have 23mm conti gp5000 but going to 25 so pressure high even less important.
I've been considering the Lezyne GripDrive HP. Would be nice to know how these various pumps compare from volume standpoint. Eg. the GripDrive (in small) is about the same length as the Road Drive, but weighs about 20g more. I don't care about weight, but perhaps this means it's a wider body (more volume)? I don't really need the 160psi that the Road Drive is supposedly capable of (the 120psi should be plenty).
#22
I guess that makes sense. Note, going to 25s will mean lower pressure, but since higher volume, not sure there'd be any net reduction in amount of pumping.
I've been considering the Lezyne GripDrive HP. Would be nice to know how these various pumps compare from volume standpoint. Eg. the GripDrive (in small) is about the same length as the Road Drive, but weighs about 20g more. I don't care about weight, but perhaps this means it's a wider body (more volume)? I don't really need the 160psi that the Road Drive is supposedly capable of (the 120psi should be plenty).
I've been considering the Lezyne GripDrive HP. Would be nice to know how these various pumps compare from volume standpoint. Eg. the GripDrive (in small) is about the same length as the Road Drive, but weighs about 20g more. I don't care about weight, but perhaps this means it's a wider body (more volume)? I don't really need the 160psi that the Road Drive is supposedly capable of (the 120psi should be plenty).
https://cyclingtips.com/2019/08/the-...ike-45-tested/
#23
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I've used mini pumps for a few years, no problems -- Topeak RaceRocket HP and HPX, and Blackburn Core Slim.
Of the three the Topeaks have the best ergonomics -- rubber grips, soft plastic rounded end caps, vs the Core Slim's hard edged metal end caps and no rubber grip. The shorter RaceRocket HP fits in a jersey pocket or some saddle bags. The longer HPX is more efficient and *can* fit a jersey pocket but will extend quite a bit. The Core Slim is too slippery and will fall out so it needs a frame clamp mounted under the water bottle cage, which is how I usually mount the longer HPX too.
I carry CO2 as well but use those only on group rides to avoid delaying everyone else. When I'm riding solo I use the mini pumps.
The trick is efficient ergonomics. Rather than pushing the extended pump closed to inject air, I pull the pump toward me. I had to learn that technique in 2018 after I was hit by a car, breaking and dislocating my strong side shoulder. I used my "good" arm just to brace the butt of the pump against my torso. I used my left hand to pull the pump toward me. It uses the stronger bicep and lateral muscles of the back, rather than the weaker triceps, shoulder and pecs.
The short hoses on those mini pumps helps. I hook a finger around the spoke and pull the entire wheel toward me along with pumping air. Sounds awkward to describe but it works really well and expends relatively little energy compared with trying to push the pump closed with weaker arm muscles.
Takes about 300 strokes with the short RaceRocket HP, about 200-250 strokes with the longer HPX and Core Slim. The first 75% of the strokes are fairly easy. The resistance increases a lot toward the end, but it is possible to inflate to my usual riding pressure -- around 80 psi rear, 65 psi front, with 700x23 and x25 tires. I weigh 150 so that's enough for comfortable riding, no problems with pinch flats. If I was heavier and needed to pump to 100-120 psi, I'd consider a full length frame pump or larger pump with folding foot and T-handle to brace on the pavement, like a small shop pump.
Or just carry plenty of CO2 cartridges and use those for everything. But carry more than you think you'll need. I've seen other riders blow most of their only CO2 cartridge into the air and need someone else to bail them out with a pump or spare CO2 cartridge.
Of the three the Topeaks have the best ergonomics -- rubber grips, soft plastic rounded end caps, vs the Core Slim's hard edged metal end caps and no rubber grip. The shorter RaceRocket HP fits in a jersey pocket or some saddle bags. The longer HPX is more efficient and *can* fit a jersey pocket but will extend quite a bit. The Core Slim is too slippery and will fall out so it needs a frame clamp mounted under the water bottle cage, which is how I usually mount the longer HPX too.
I carry CO2 as well but use those only on group rides to avoid delaying everyone else. When I'm riding solo I use the mini pumps.
The trick is efficient ergonomics. Rather than pushing the extended pump closed to inject air, I pull the pump toward me. I had to learn that technique in 2018 after I was hit by a car, breaking and dislocating my strong side shoulder. I used my "good" arm just to brace the butt of the pump against my torso. I used my left hand to pull the pump toward me. It uses the stronger bicep and lateral muscles of the back, rather than the weaker triceps, shoulder and pecs.
The short hoses on those mini pumps helps. I hook a finger around the spoke and pull the entire wheel toward me along with pumping air. Sounds awkward to describe but it works really well and expends relatively little energy compared with trying to push the pump closed with weaker arm muscles.
Takes about 300 strokes with the short RaceRocket HP, about 200-250 strokes with the longer HPX and Core Slim. The first 75% of the strokes are fairly easy. The resistance increases a lot toward the end, but it is possible to inflate to my usual riding pressure -- around 80 psi rear, 65 psi front, with 700x23 and x25 tires. I weigh 150 so that's enough for comfortable riding, no problems with pinch flats. If I was heavier and needed to pump to 100-120 psi, I'd consider a full length frame pump or larger pump with folding foot and T-handle to brace on the pavement, like a small shop pump.
Or just carry plenty of CO2 cartridges and use those for everything. But carry more than you think you'll need. I've seen other riders blow most of their only CO2 cartridge into the air and need someone else to bail them out with a pump or spare CO2 cartridge.
#24
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Update number 2. Another flat today hit a huge pothole trying to avoid but car was passing me had to keep my line. So a pinch flat I get in a hurry. Stopped pulled the Leyzen Road drive out and was back in order pretty quick. About as fast as co2 and get my adrenaline going when I get a flat so road the final 6 miles of a 56 mile ride. Came home and check the tire with my floor pump and gage it was at 84 psi, that is fine.
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#25
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And perhaps against a dried up tube of glue in that ancient patch kit. What's more disappointing than finally needing that patch kit, after carrying it 5-10 years or more, only to find the glue is all dried up???
But then the pre-glued patches will probably dry up as well, given enough time.
But then the pre-glued patches will probably dry up as well, given enough time.