Absolute best floor pump without a thread-on chuck.
#1
Thread Starter
Senior Member
Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 2,510
Likes: 51
Absolute best floor pump without a thread-on chuck.
I am sick of my Lezyne floor pump with the threaded chuck. What is the highest quality, shop-quality, last a lifetime, money is no object floor pump with a quick-release chuck.
#2
Senior Member
Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 781
Likes: 1
From: chicago
Bikes: cannondale crit 3.0, specialized allez, old giant mtb/hybrid
Dont know about the best but I have 2 specialized pumps that have never failed me. They have pretty bad reviews online but have lasted me many years. Had a joe blow but had a valve spring a leak or something of the sorts.
#5
Senior Member
Joined: Jul 2009
Posts: 2,012
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From: Orlando, FL
Bikes: Specialized Roubaix SL3, Lynskey Cooper CX
Is it just the threaded chuck, or do you totally dislike the Lezyne pump? They have replacement chucks that do not thread on. I have both chucks for my Lezyne, but actually prefer the threaded chuck.
#11
Senior Member
Joined: Jun 2009
Posts: 429
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From: Irvine, CA
Bikes: Scott CR1 Team road bike, Giant XTC mountain bike , Bike Friday Pocket Llama
+1 on the Specialized pumps. My Airtool Pro is great. Solidly built, head locks on positively, works fine with both Presta and Schrader valves.
#12
If you really want a floor pump that'll last you the rest of your life, then there are two steps.
Step 1: Buy a Park Tool Pro level floor pump;
Step 2: Buy the chuck linked here. I bought one a while back for an old favorite pump whose chuck had gone bad, and it got to me from Japan in about five days. And I paid thru PayPal. The dollar was a little stronger than the Yen when I bought mine.
https://www.alexscycle.com/misc-/othe...hose-band.html
Attach the Hirame Chuck Yoko to your Park Tool pump, and you'll most likely never need another pump for the rest of your life.
By the way, the stainless steel hose band I used was purchased for under two bucks from Home Depot.
Step 1: Buy a Park Tool Pro level floor pump;
Step 2: Buy the chuck linked here. I bought one a while back for an old favorite pump whose chuck had gone bad, and it got to me from Japan in about five days. And I paid thru PayPal. The dollar was a little stronger than the Yen when I bought mine.
https://www.alexscycle.com/misc-/othe...hose-band.html
Attach the Hirame Chuck Yoko to your Park Tool pump, and you'll most likely never need another pump for the rest of your life.
By the way, the stainless steel hose band I used was purchased for under two bucks from Home Depot.
#14
Senior Member
Joined: Feb 2012
Posts: 628
Likes: 7
From: Bangkok: hottest average temperature :(
Bikes: *1998 GT Forte Ti 700c, Totem KDS-D 26" fatbike, BirdyGT 18", Brompton M2LX 16"
I've only had my Joe Blow for 4 years but it has worked no problem and I use it to pump up motorcycle tires often as well as my bicycles. My friend loves those Beto pumps but they are all plastic and I feel the Joe Blow is far faster pumping volume and pressure.
#15
I've tried several name brand pumps at work and I have had nothing but trouble using them. I guess you need enough experience with any one pump to figure out how to use it properly.
YMMV
#16
Senior Member
Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 251
Likes: 4
From: Lansing, MI
Bikes: Cannondale CAAD13, Motobecane Vent Noir
I've got a Bontrager self-selecting pump that does a great job. Skimming through the responses it seems that pump quality is (like most other things) somewhat correlated to price. I'd say almost any pump at a $50 price point would be adequate for most people.
#17
I got 99 problems....
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 2,087
Likes: 3
From: Does anyone know where the love of God goes, when the waves turn the minutes to hours?
Joe Blow Pro.
This thing wants to blow even when I'm not in the mood. It doesn't matter how long, short, skinny, or fat your stem is. This thing gets on there quick and it don't get off until the job is done.
This thing wants to blow even when I'm not in the mood. It doesn't matter how long, short, skinny, or fat your stem is. This thing gets on there quick and it don't get off until the job is done.
#18
Serfas, Nashbar, Hurricane (Performance) all work well for years. Not sure you will ever find a lifetime pump as the rubber hardens and you will eventually end up replacing a hose or a gasket in the chuck. Just get a good one for $30 (or less) and replace every 10 years.
#19
Extra Medium Member

Joined: Jul 2006
Posts: 1,880
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From: Erie, Co
Bikes: Fezzari Empire; State 6061 Allroad gravel; Scott Spark; Specialized Status 140
Right....I bought some pump that says "Schwinn" on it at wally-world of all places about 9 years ago on a whim as I needed one basically right away...it has presta for our bikes, schrader for the kid's bikes and a quick release. I think it cost $11-ish. The gauge on it is pretty accurate, it's metal and it has yet to break. Really, the best place I've found to spend a few extra bucks is on the pump I carry with me...cheap mini-pumps just DO NOT work!
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Droping the hamer since '86
#20
Right....I bought some pump that says "Schwinn" on it at wally-world of all places about 9 years ago on a whim as I needed one basically right away...it has presta for our bikes, schrader for the kid's bikes and a quick release. I think it cost $11-ish. The gauge on it is pretty accurate, it's metal and it has yet to break. Really, the best place I've found to spend a few extra bucks is on the pump I carry with me...cheap mini-pumps just DO NOT work!
#21
Senior Member
Joined: May 2010
Posts: 2,330
Likes: 2
From: Antioch, IL
Bikes: 2013 Synapse 4
redtires is correct about minipumps, if you feel the need to spend good money on a pump, spend it there first, inexpensive floor pumps are fine, cheap mini's? not so much.
#22
Thread Killer

Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 13,140
Likes: 2,162
From: Ann Arbor, MI
Bikes: 15 Kinesis Racelight 4S, 76 Motebecane Gran Jubilée, 17 Dedacciai Gladiatore2, 12 Breezer Venturi, 09 Dahon Mariner, 12 Mercier Nano, 95 DeKerf Team SL, 19 Tern Rally, 21 Breezer Doppler Cafe+, 19 T-Lab X3, 91 Serotta CII, 23 3T Strada
If you really want a floor pump that'll last you the rest of your life, then there are two steps.
Step 1: Buy a Park Tool Pro level floor pump;
Step 2: Buy the chuck linked here. I bought one a while back for an old favorite pump whose chuck had gone bad, and it got to me from Japan in about five days. And I paid thru PayPal. The dollar was a little stronger than the Yen when I bought mine.
https://www.alexscycle.com/misc-/othe...hose-band.html
Attach the Hirame Chuck Yoko to your Park Tool pump, and you'll most likely never need another pump for the rest of your life.
By the way, the stainless steel hose band I used was purchased for under two bucks from Home Depot.
Step 1: Buy a Park Tool Pro level floor pump;
Step 2: Buy the chuck linked here. I bought one a while back for an old favorite pump whose chuck had gone bad, and it got to me from Japan in about five days. And I paid thru PayPal. The dollar was a little stronger than the Yen when I bought mine.
https://www.alexscycle.com/misc-/othe...hose-band.html
Attach the Hirame Chuck Yoko to your Park Tool pump, and you'll most likely never need another pump for the rest of your life.
By the way, the stainless steel hose band I used was purchased for under two bucks from Home Depot.
Other pumps to look at include the benchmark Silca Super Pista which is easily and fully rebuildable, and the SKS Rennkompressor. I inherited a Super Pista many years ago, but lost it at race, which was a bummer.
I've been pretty lucky with what is probably a decade old Nashbar unit, though I do have quibbles; the guage is small and hard to read, the auto-selecting head doesn't always select correctly right away, it's a bit unstable, and it's not the most efficient as pressures rise. I do periodically disassemble and lubricate the pump cylinder and plunger, which may help with longevity, but really, I think I've been more fortunate than wise.
if I really wanted to spend $90 on a new pump today, I'd probably go SKS and the Hirame chuck.
#23
Senior Member


Joined: Jan 2013
Posts: 3,139
Likes: 877
Bikes: too many sparkly Italians, some sweet Americans and a couple interesting Japanese
Silca. I have only replaced the chuck gaskets and leather cylinder seal and the gauge (dropped a wrench on the glass cover). Silca life is measured in decades not years.
#24
John Wayne Toilet Paper
Joined: Feb 2006
Posts: 1,952
Likes: 0
From: Roanoke
Bikes: BH carbon, Ritchey steel, Kona aluminum
I've had my Silca for 20 years and only had to replace the leather piston washer, check valve, and rubber chuck gasket once each.
Still, I'd stick with your Lezyne and just get their Slip Chuck to replace the thread-on head instead of buying a whole new pump. Always buy non-threaded valve stems and the slip-chuck will last for a decade.
Still, I'd stick with your Lezyne and just get their Slip Chuck to replace the thread-on head instead of buying a whole new pump. Always buy non-threaded valve stems and the slip-chuck will last for a decade.
Last edited by nhluhr; 05-31-13 at 09:58 AM.




