Frame Pump
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Frame Pump
I took the long way home yesterday and I had a flat. No problem, I though. I change the tire/tube and started to pump up the tire. Nothing. The pump wouldn't work.. What is the best frame pump on the market?
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A new pump? A pump that's been maintained, i.e. the O-ring has been oiled periodically? Not just trying to be sarcastic; the problem is any pump that's infrequently used may have seals dry up and shrink, and then they don't seal any more.
I've been a fan of the Topeak Road Morph for years. Not quite a frame pump, though it mounts on the frame. It pumps well for 10 years or so without any maintenance.
I've been a fan of the Topeak Road Morph for years. Not quite a frame pump, though it mounts on the frame. It pumps well for 10 years or so without any maintenance.
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The pumps that are a joy to use and are very reliable are the Zephal HPX pumps. Full sized (they come in four lengths) to fit under top tubes or in front of seatposts. Many run them along the left seatstay on modern CF bikes. 90 strokes will get most road tires to full pressure, not just "enough to get home". 120 psi is easy. They require close to no maintenance and replacement gaskets are available. Company is going nowhere. They've been making those pumps and their very similar predecessor for 50 years. I've been using the HPs since 1973 and have two on bikes now. The HPXs started around 20-25 years ago. Biggest difference between them is that on the HPX, yo can lock and unlock the handle spring so when you pump, you aren't working against it. That and the HPXs are black, not silver unless you get the silver "Classic"r.
Those HPs were my only pumps for years; one on each bike. I did all my racing with just those. (Yeah, at some races I had the luxury of someone putting a floor pump in my hands; sometimes even with a gauge!) Racing tires were thin latex tubed and got pumped from scratch every time.
Those HPs were my only pumps for years; one on each bike. I did all my racing with just those. (Yeah, at some races I had the luxury of someone putting a floor pump in my hands; sometimes even with a gauge!) Racing tires were thin latex tubed and got pumped from scratch every time.
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#4
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I have 3 Topeak road morphs, one older and two newer models. All work well. One is on my road bike, one on my commuter, and the third was to replace the older one but realized I just didn't need it. I've put the third on various other bikes at times. What surprised me is that when I went to use the one on my commuter (I've retired but still use this bike to get around) I had never changed it over to presta valves, which means I'd never gotten a flat in the three years I had it with me! Now of course I've jinxed it.
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Anyone have experience with the Uniche pump? - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01AUHOY2C...ing=UTF8&psc=1
Has a pressure gauge built in. Definitely more work than a Zefal HP, but seems to have decent reviews on youtube. For frame pumps, Zefal is hard to beat. There are other options if you want something smaller.
Has a pressure gauge built in. Definitely more work than a Zefal HP, but seems to have decent reviews on youtube. For frame pumps, Zefal is hard to beat. There are other options if you want something smaller.
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Depends on whether you need a high pressure (road) or high volume (MTB, really wide city/touring/urban) pump.
High pressure the Lezyne Road Drive is excellent. Lots of good reviews for the Silca Tattico and Topeak Road Morph, although I found the latter confusing to use when I borrowed it once before I bought the Lezyne.
I don't have much experience with high volume minipumps but was just researching them for my new MTB. There are good reviews for the one I just ordered: Lezyne Pocket Drive, and also for the OneUp EDC and CrankBrothers Gem.
High pressure the Lezyne Road Drive is excellent. Lots of good reviews for the Silca Tattico and Topeak Road Morph, although I found the latter confusing to use when I borrowed it once before I bought the Lezyne.
I don't have much experience with high volume minipumps but was just researching them for my new MTB. There are good reviews for the one I just ordered: Lezyne Pocket Drive, and also for the OneUp EDC and CrankBrothers Gem.
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Road Morph ftw.
#8
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The pumps that are a joy to use and are very reliable are the Zephal HPX pumps. Full sized (they come in four lengths) to fit under top tubes or in front of seatposts. Many run them along the left seatstay on modern CF bikes. 90 strokes will get most road tires to full pressure, not just "enough to get home". 120 psi is easy. They require close to no maintenance and replacement gaskets are available. Company is going nowhere. They've been making those pumps and their very similar predecessor for 50 years. I've been using the HPs since 1973 and have two on bikes now. The HPXs started around 20-25 years ago. Biggest difference between them is that on the HPX, yo can lock and unlock the handle spring so when you pump, you aren't working against it. That and the HPXs are black, not silver unless you get the silver "Classic"r.
Those HPs were my only pumps for years; one on each bike. I did all my racing with just those. (Yeah, at some races I had the luxury of someone putting a floor pump in my hands; sometimes even with a gauge!) Racing tires were thin latex tubed and got pumped from scratch every time.
Those HPs were my only pumps for years; one on each bike. I did all my racing with just those. (Yeah, at some races I had the luxury of someone putting a floor pump in my hands; sometimes even with a gauge!) Racing tires were thin latex tubed and got pumped from scratch every time.
Boosting this. If you want a true frame pump, nothing else will do. Topeak Road Morph doesn’t even come close to a Zefal HPX. Full-size frame pumps have gone out of style, but not because there’s anything available that replaces their function. If you want speed and light weight, get a CO2 inflator and a couple canisters. If you want 100% reliability and unlimited air, get a Zefal HPX.
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Just do some research and read reviews on any pump you are considering. I generally just use Co2 cartridges but I do have a Bontrager Air Support HV frame pump for emergencies and it works fine.
I generally only carry one tube, one Co2 and Park GP-2 patches for emergency use if I get more than one flat on a ride.
I generally only carry one tube, one Co2 and Park GP-2 patches for emergency use if I get more than one flat on a ride.
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Lezyne Micro Floor HP
https://ride.lezyne.com/products/1-mp-mfdr-v204hp
It has a holder that screws on the frame without blocking anything (pump is held offset), the thing screws onto the valve (better seal than a a
squeezing end) and it has a pull-out panel to step for leverage and work like a small portable floor pump.
I hate the super small ones you hold in two hands and work with a vulgar rhythmic motion.
https://ride.lezyne.com/products/1-mp-mfdr-v204hp
It has a holder that screws on the frame without blocking anything (pump is held offset), the thing screws onto the valve (better seal than a a
squeezing end) and it has a pull-out panel to step for leverage and work like a small portable floor pump.
I hate the super small ones you hold in two hands and work with a vulgar rhythmic motion.
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Frame pumps? I don't know about those. People now a days tend to be using these much lesser. I'm not sure but aren't there CO2 inflators going about the market? I'd rather use those instead of a frame pump. Frame pumps just doesn't sit right with me.
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[QUOTE=surak;22629681]Depends on whether you need a high pressure (road) or high volume (MTB, really wide city/touring/urban) pump.
High pressure the Lezyne Road Drive is excellent. Lots of good reviews for the Silca Tattico and Topeak Road Morph, although I found the latter confusing to use when I borrowed it once before I bought the Lezyne.
I don't have much experience with high volume minipumps but was just researching them for my new MTB. There are good reviews for the one I just ordered: Lezyne Pocket Drive, and also for the OneUp EDC and CrankBrothers Gem.[/QUO NTE]
The Zephal HPX isn't design for high volume tires but it does rather well anyway. Not a hardship to ride 38c tires to the gravel, drop the pressure to almost nothing then pump back up to 70 psi to get home. So, again, put one of these on each bike and you're done; ready for anything. Pumping tires is so easy it's simply not a big deal. Nightmare ride with a half dozen or more flats? Yes, tubes, tires, patches may be a huge issue but getting sufficient air in won't be.
High pressure the Lezyne Road Drive is excellent. Lots of good reviews for the Silca Tattico and Topeak Road Morph, although I found the latter confusing to use when I borrowed it once before I bought the Lezyne.
I don't have much experience with high volume minipumps but was just researching them for my new MTB. There are good reviews for the one I just ordered: Lezyne Pocket Drive, and also for the OneUp EDC and CrankBrothers Gem.[/QUO NTE]
The Zephal HPX isn't design for high volume tires but it does rather well anyway. Not a hardship to ride 38c tires to the gravel, drop the pressure to almost nothing then pump back up to 70 psi to get home. So, again, put one of these on each bike and you're done; ready for anything. Pumping tires is so easy it's simply not a big deal. Nightmare ride with a half dozen or more flats? Yes, tubes, tires, patches may be a huge issue but getting sufficient air in won't be.
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I have a Mountain Morph. I had a heart surgery and for a while my chest couldn’t do mini pumps, so I needed the foot rest,. Only disadvantage is it’s huge. Road Morph is just as long but smaller diameter for higher pressure.
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I have Silca and Zefal frame pumps and like them. Unfortunately they don't fit on some of my bikes.