I LOVE my road morph. Lots of mounting options - and yep - you can get a tire up to 120. Not as mini as some, but it fits (with lots of space to spare) on my 52cm road frame.
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What's anyone's experience with mini pumps? Can you really get a road tire up to pressure? Can you do it in a reasonable amount of time/effort?
I'd like to get away from the CO2 cartridges, but don't have a lot of room on my frame for a full-sized frame pump.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
I LOVE my road morph. Lots of mounting options - and yep - you can get a tire up to 120. Not as mini as some, but it fits (with lots of space to spare) on my 52cm road frame.
Most days in life don't stand out, But life's about those days that will...
I love the road morph too. I love the little fold out do hickey that let's you use it as a floor pump and the built-in guage. But it didn't work on my Rodriguez.I think I kept hitting it on my sloping top tube when I removed my water bottle and my bigger water bottle wouldn't fit with it mounted there(I chug down a lot of water on my rides so I prefer the bigger one). Also, it was too long for my seat tube.
So I searched & searched and found this one:
The Quicker Pro
http://www.quickex.com/
This is where I purchased mine:
http://www.velo-orange.com/quickerpropump.html
Here it is mounted on my seat tube:
Mimi posted a pic in the Seattle TE Fitting Party thread that shows it a bit better:
It has three telescoping sections and is about the size of my hand span(fingers splayed). FYI I do have largish hands: size 8 glove. I don't find it hard to use and I don't think I'm particularly blessed in the upper body strength department but YMMV. It might take more pumps than the Road Morph to pump-up a tire, but it takes a lot less plunging than other pumps of similar size with a lot less effort. It even has a built in guage. It would probably(sp?) fit in a large seat bag, something like the Baggins-type bags. I am suspicious of the attachment thingy that came with it but it hasn't fallen off so far.
I can try to get some more pics of it tomorrow if you want.
Everything in moderation, including moderation.
2007 Rodriguez Adventure/B72
2009 Masi Soulville Mixte/B18
1997 Trek 820 Step-thru Xtracycle/B17
SGT- that's a very unusual frame - what kind of bike is that?
2008 Trek FX 7.2/Terry Cite X
2009 Jamis Aurora/Brooks B-68
2010 Trek FX 7.6 WSD/stock bontrager
I have a tiny frame and the road morph doesn't fit on it. Everything was tried.
I always carry CO2 AND a pump. I have a Zefal mini-pump. I have used it only twice but it worked well.
Please do not carry "just" CO2. Unless you use them all the time they can be finicky and you could waste two carts before you know it! Then you're stuck.
Good luck!
It's a custom Rodriguez Adventure. I'm 5'1 3/4" with a 26 in. standover. So long torso with short stumps for legs. The guys at R&E thought I'd be better off on a modified step-through frame than to try to shorten the seat tube down which would lengthen the DT way too much(can't remember why that wasn't ideal) and make it come in at a wierd angle(maybe, that's why). The short tube from the top of the ST to the sloping TT helps brace the TT and gives the frame strength overall for hauling heavy loads(gear + heavy rider-50 lbs. over my ideal weight
). The problem with some frames is they flex(this might only be an issue with steel) a bit too much when fully loaded and this problem can be worse in a step-through design. I'm guessing that's what the whole discussion about lateral stiffness meant between BIAK, Smiley, and the actual builder guy(Sorry, I don't remember his name.) Anyhow, to give you an example of why lateral stiffness might be important: BIAK's previous touring bike would flex when he was climbing hills with a load which caused his chain to jump to a smaller cog and throw him off of his cadence.
Hopefully the more technically apt riders will weigh in and explain things better or correct me if I'm wrong. (Yoohoo, BIAK! Time to put that physics degree to use.)
[Sorry for the thread highjack]
Last edited by sgtiger; 03-31-2008 at 08:46 AM.
Everything in moderation, including moderation.
2007 Rodriguez Adventure/B72
2009 Masi Soulville Mixte/B18
1997 Trek 820 Step-thru Xtracycle/B17
The Road morph is excellent if you've got the space for it.
Last year, when I got my new bike, I got this mini carbon pump (as a kind of joke on myself - like the weight savings would really make a difference for me!) but before I bought it, I asked at the LBS if I could try pumping up a tire with one. It took about 100 strokes to fill a tire up firm enough to ride, and it wasn't that hard to do. So now I carry a CO2 pump and 2 cartridges, and the mini pump, and feel like I am well covered.
Will your LBS let you try a mini-pump, to see how much effort it is?
Keep calm and carry on...
I have both a road morph and a mini-morph... They are pretty much the same pump except that the mini is about an inch shorter and it doesn't have a built in gauge. I keep the road morph on my commuter which has slightly more clearance between the front tire and the down tube (due to a 24" front tire) than my road bike which is 650's. Both bikes are 19" Terry's (~ 48cm)The mini morph fits on the underside of my downtube on my road bike as you can see in this version of my avatar:
Both pumps will easily get a tire up to pressure...even a 23mm 650!
My new non-farm blog: Finding Freedom
We have both the road morph and the mini morph and love them. With the road morph, I can pump up my road tires to the correct pressure, I like the little piece that flips out for a foot hold, how the handle turns to a "T" to push easier and the pressure gauge comes in handy. I currently have it hanging on the bottom side of my top tube only because I was using both of my spots for a water bottle and my lock. I am moving my bottle to the handlebars soon and will put the pump on my downtube. As for the mini morph, Kitsune06 has it on her commuter which is a more compact geometry to mount and doesn't need the higher pressure so it works great for her. No gauge on that one.
goodluck!![]()
Oh, that's gonna bruise...![]()
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Only the suppressed word is dangerous. ~Ludwig Börne
True that! The Road Morph fits in my handle bar bag and truck rack or can be vecroed into my rear rack now. But I didn't have those when I purchased the quicker pro.
That explains everything!I was wondering why I was laughing maniacally on all those photos.
I had the drunken giggle fits!
".....how dry I<hic> am, how dry I<hic> am. NoBOOOOdy knooows how<hic> dry I ammmm....."<hic>
~sg(drunken)tiger![]()
Everything in moderation, including moderation.
2007 Rodriguez Adventure/B72
2009 Masi Soulville Mixte/B18
1997 Trek 820 Step-thru Xtracycle/B17
Here's some pics of the quicker pro, in case anyone is interested:
More pics in this link w/captions here:
http://picasaweb.google.com/sgtiger3/Quickex
Everything in moderation, including moderation.
2007 Rodriguez Adventure/B72
2009 Masi Soulville Mixte/B18
1997 Trek 820 Step-thru Xtracycle/B17