Track pumps
- timdownieuk
- Posts: 223
- Joined: 25 Jul 2014, 12:05pm
Track pumps
Maybe too well known generally to be worth a mention but for anyone who *hasn't* got a track pump (and if you're at all serious about cycling you should get one), this one from Wiggle is a fantastic bargain.
http://www.wiggle.co.uk/lifeline-essential-track-pump/?lang=en&curr=GBP&dest=1&utm_source=pla&utm_medium=base&utm_campaign=uk&kpid=5360530834
The quality is fantastic and at the price (£12.99 with free postage) almost unbelievable.
No connection with wiggle, just so pleased with mine I bought another for the motorhome.
Tim
http://www.wiggle.co.uk/lifeline-essential-track-pump/?lang=en&curr=GBP&dest=1&utm_source=pla&utm_medium=base&utm_campaign=uk&kpid=5360530834
The quality is fantastic and at the price (£12.99 with free postage) almost unbelievable.
No connection with wiggle, just so pleased with mine I bought another for the motorhome.
Tim
Re: Track pumps
I use a Zefal HPX frame fit pump. Inflates to 130 psi so not being a track rider I don't need a track pump for pressure.
Also I have the pump with me when I need it
Also I have the pump with me when I need it
- timdownieuk
- Posts: 223
- Joined: 25 Jul 2014, 12:05pm
Re: Track pumps
ANTONISH wrote:I use a Zefal HPX frame fit pump. Inflates to 130 psi so not being a track rider I don't need a track pump for pressure.
Also I have the pump with me when I need it
I have a good frame pump too but for quickly and easily topping your tyres up, a good track pump way out performs a frame pump and makes keeping tyres topped up a pleasure rather than a chore.
Tim
- HaroldBriercliffe
- Posts: 45
- Joined: 12 Aug 2014, 1:45pm
Re: Track pumps
I bought the track pump that had the most recommendations on Amazon as the pressure gauge on my car foot pump isn't to be trusted
Cost about £11 plus postage.
Absolutely brilliant it is effortless to operate and does the job nicely.
Cost about £11 plus postage.
Absolutely brilliant it is effortless to operate and does the job nicely.
" A Zen master's life is one continuous mistake."
(Dogen)
(Dogen)
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- Posts: 4347
- Joined: 11 Nov 2012, 9:24am
- Location: On the borders of the four South East Counties
Re: Track pumps
Yes, agreed, they are also good for topping up car tyres etc IIRC old cars were supplied with track pumps rather than foot pumps.timdownieuk wrote: just so pleased with mine I bought another for the motorhome.
Tim
"It takes a genius to spot the obvious" - my old physics master.
I don't peddle bikes.
I don't peddle bikes.
Re: Track pumps
MikeF wrote:Yes, agreed, they are also good for topping up car tyres etc IIRC old cars were supplied with track pumps rather than foot pumps.
My dad bought a Moskvitch new in the early 1970s which came with a 'track' style pump with a screw on connector. The car was sold a couple of years later and no doubt scrapped before the decade was out, but the pump lives on in his garage giving dependable service to this day.
Re: Track pumps
timdownieuk wrote:
I have a good frame pump too but for quickly and easily topping your tyres up, a good track pump way out performs a frame pump and makes keeping tyres topped up a pleasure rather than a chore.
Tim
Yep,agreed.
Topeak JoeBlow Sport(on recommendation from Gaz of this parish,Thanks Gaz )the absolute bees knees,for £20,I've had it for about five years now,it never fails to impress
http://www.chainreactioncycles.com/tope ... -prod39688
They've gone up in price a bit,now £28
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"All we are not stares back at what we are"
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"All we are not stares back at what we are"
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- Vetus Ossa
- Posts: 1591
- Joined: 22 Oct 2012, 7:32pm
- Location: Plymouth
Re: Track pumps
I have had my Topeak JoeBlow track pump for about five years also, and it has pumped up an awful lot of tyres effortlessly in that time. I replaced the innards with their head rebuild kit this week, and at £1.70 something, I’m not complaining.
Beauty will save the world.
Re: Track pumps
+1 form the joeBlow. The longevity of mine has made it worth every penny.
Supporter of the A10 corridor cycling campaign serving Royston to Cambridge http://a10corridorcycle.com. Never knew gardening secateurs were an essential part of the on bike tool kit until I took up campaigning.....
- HaroldBriercliffe
- Posts: 45
- Joined: 12 Aug 2014, 1:45pm
Re: Track pumps
niggle wrote:MikeF wrote:Yes, agreed, they are also good for topping up car tyres etc IIRC old cars were supplied with track pumps rather than foot pumps.
My dad bought a Moskvitch new in the early 1970s which came with a 'track' style pump with a screw on connector. The car was sold a couple of years later and no doubt scrapped before the decade was out, but the pump lives on in his garage giving dependable service to this day.
I had a series of Ladas up to the last Riva( cheapskate masochist), each model came with a massive toolkit as standard including a bombproof 'stirrup' track pump plus a separate pressure gauge.
" A Zen master's life is one continuous mistake."
(Dogen)
(Dogen)
Re: Track pumps
track pump V Zefal hpx.....hmm. I have both, and use both. Cheap and cheerful Decathlon one. If I'm on a ride and I get a flat, yes I use the HPX, but more often than not , a tyre deflates over night, due to a....visitation, and then its so much easier to swap tube and pump up with the track pump, espescially as mine has a gauge with a moveable bright orange marker, that I can set to 90psi, so when I have forgotten my glasses, I can pump up easily to the right pressure, without squinting.
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- Joined: 30 Jun 2013, 8:53pm
Re: Track pumps
What do we think of the SKS Rennkompressor? Looks like the Rolls-Royce of pumps. Claimed to go up to 230 PSI. I’ve seen these around for as long as I can remember but never quite got around to buying one. Pricey.
Re: Track pumps
OnYourRight wrote:What do we think of the SKS Rennkompressor? Looks like the Rolls-Royce of pumps. Claimed to go up to 230 PSI. I’ve seen these around for as long as I can remember but never quite got around to buying one. Pricey.
A bit overpriced at 50 odd quid when you can get one of these for 70 http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/COBRA-AIR-TOO ... 4ad52ca1c7
'Give me my bike, a bit of sunshine - and a stop-off for a lunchtime pint - and I'm a happy man.' - Reg Baker
- timdownieuk
- Posts: 223
- Joined: 25 Jul 2014, 12:05pm
Re: Track pumps
OnYourRight wrote:What do we think of the SKS Rennkompressor? Looks like the Rolls-Royce of pumps. Claimed to go up to 230 PSI. I’ve seen these around for as long as I can remember but never quite got around to buying one. Pricey.
Who uses 230 psi? Surely a gauge calibrated up to that level is going to be less clear than one calibrated up to 120 say.
I note that the Manchester velodrome stipulates 119 psi (which seems a very odd number unless regulation forbid pressures over 120).
http://www2.nationalcyclingcentre.com/documents/Track%20bike%20specification.pdf
Re: Track pumps
Renn compressor, yes but surely you mean only up to 230psi, my SKS base camp goes up to 260psi (well, the dial does at least). Good for air suspension forks I suspect. Agree about less clear dial down in the lowely sub 100psi world I live in.
FYI. SKS hose heads not always the best (washer wise), I speak as when used for commercial use. Twin hole heads end up as unreliable as all the others (the switching ball inside the head gets stiff/sticky, so doesn't switch from 1 hole to the other I think). At work, given up and use 1 pump for presta, and 1 for shreader.
At home, the twin hole head on my airbase works fine.
FYI. SKS hose heads not always the best (washer wise), I speak as when used for commercial use. Twin hole heads end up as unreliable as all the others (the switching ball inside the head gets stiff/sticky, so doesn't switch from 1 hole to the other I think). At work, given up and use 1 pump for presta, and 1 for shreader.
At home, the twin hole head on my airbase works fine.