Not a frame fit pump. Instead it is a travel pump I got after receiving a gift certificate from my father & not being able to find anything at the corresponding shop that I needed. Works very well. Various rubber o-rings in the pump head are routinely available at hardware stores as far as I can tell. Haven't taken it apart beyond that. I figure a travel pump + small carry-along pump is the best of both worlds. Has the added benefit of looking like a small sniper rifle in my luggage, resulting frequent TSA fondling of my dirty underwear and sweaty cycling kit that I pack in the top layer of my clothes.
I also have an old Silca w/Campy head that came with my Raleigh Professional, but my carry-along pump is an old Blackburn Airstik from a long while ago. Why more pumps don't come with T-folding handles I know not. With it I can do 90 psi easy.
Wow. I never thought there would be so much variation in view on this topic. To me, frame pumps are retro, and retro means Silca, and it's only cool if it's painted to match the bike.
It used to be that you could spot a custom bike from 50 yards (yeah yards, we didn't have meters back then) by a color-matched Silca. It grabbed attention like a quail flying past a Black Lab.
.
Nick
“If today is not your day,
then be happy
for this day shall never return.
And if today is your day,
then be happy now
for this day shall never return.”
― Kamand Kojouri
basic question, that I may have missed .....
Is the HPX still made???
I could really use a couple of them.
Tskkk... a simple visit to their ssite is all you needed
HPX Classic - Zéfal
Support your local bike shop.
REALLY???? I Hated that thing with a vengeance. after two punctures I went back to the HPX.
My advice for a minipump: The quicker pro; Bicycle mini pumps
I never had a better minipump.
Support your local bike shop.
I've had several of the Blackburn Airsticks. I preferred the first gen push-on head, but unfortunately lost it out of a trailer... The thumb-lock ones are "okay", but latest one I have has a twist-action lock-on, which works better. But the T-handle is a must for mini-pumps, IMO.
DT
http://www.mjolnircycles.com/
Some are born to move the world to live their fantasies...
"the fun outweighs the suck, and the suck hasn't killed me yet." -- chasea
"Sometimes, as good as it feels to speak out, silence is the only way to rise above the morass. The high road is generally a quiet route." -- echelon_john
The answer I've found for this problem is to find a fence post or road sign post to rest the pump head on. This makes it A LOT easier. With a Silca like this, you can get any pressure you need reasonably quickly. The worst was when I got a slow leak that let me go about 1 mile, and my spare had a worse leak. I was looking for posts every mile all the way home.
Mark Walberg
Building bike frames for fun since 1973.
In my bid to join the Big Boys Proper Frame Pump Club, I eyed up my frameset, did some measuring and decided to try placing a Zefal HPX#2 in this position:
The length of the pump is fine, but I'm a little wary of its security particularly considering its proximity to the rear wheel.
The seatstays are too tight to seat the pump fully 'under' the NDS stay. I thought a strap could help secure it there, so there's a velcro placeholder for now.
I also think another (rubber?) grip/strap of some sort could be used to secure the pump handle down close to the dropout. Any suggestions on what to use?
The frame has no pump peg/nipple on the HT, so I erred towards the rear location. Would I be better off returning this pump and ordering an HPX#3 for use under the TT (strapped in place - no pump peg)?
Neil
I've had pumps mounted like this a years - sometimes with the lowerpart on the chainstay/dropout as you do, and sometimes on the tip of the quick-release lever. I use a strap as you have. It works fine, but the one problem is that water/gunk from the road tends to get to the pump. I've tried to cover the edge of the handle with a sort of boot made from an inner tube, which helps. But this position seems to kill pumps faster. Under the top tube is much better for the pump - the only downside to that position, if it can work on your bike, is if you tend to lift the bike a lot with your hands/shoulders.
That said, I don't trust a pump under the top tube without a pump peg on the headtube.
Trod Harland, Pickle Expediter
Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced. — James Baldwin
I went for the rear-stay solution on account of living in a 3rd-floor apartment and shouldering my bike up and down stairs every ride. If I were to fit and remove an HPX pump under the TT every ride I expect the paintwork would be chipped to hell in no time. Not ideal, as I plan to upgrade from this frameset in the next year or so.
I thought I saw chrome clip-on pump pegs somewhere online, but can't find them for sale - does anyone know where I could get one? Then I could simply move the HPX#2 to the TT and hold it against the ST with said clip-on peg.
The upside-down nature of the pump as it is now does lend itself to water and crud dribbling down into the handle.
TH, the bearing and washer is a fine idea. If I had any means of bending and machining metal, I'd probably go for it!
Neil
Silca frame pump is inevitable. I held the prototype in my hands recently and its all that and a bag of chips. When that becomes available everything else becomes less than ;) AND it will be available to your favorite framebuilders disassembled ready for paint. Yes!
Josh Simonds
www.nixfrixshun.com
www.facebook.com/NFSspeedshop
www.bicycle-coach.com
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