Innovation Superinflate CO2 Pump

DESCRIPTION

Threaded CO2 cartridge inflates a 23mm road tire to 130 psi. 16 grams.

USER REVIEWS

Showing 1-9 of 9  
[Jan 04, 2002]
Andrew
Racer

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
Strength:

Fills tires fast, small, fits with extra cartridge in small bag behind saddle

Weakness:

Multiple cartridges to fill a mtb tire

This is a great product, AS LONG AS you don't buy the carts at the bike store. The same ones are sold for co2 guns at less than 50 cents a cart.

Similar Products Used:

pump, mouth

[Jul 26, 2000]
Rob
Cross Country Rider

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
Strength:

Everything.

Weakness:

It is, theoretically, possible to run out of CO2 carts. However, the one time I came close, I ran out of patches first.

This evening a buddy e-mailed me asking "what new frame pump should I buy?" This is (in part) what I sent back:

OK, your're going to initially hate my technoweenie advice on pumps,
but hear me out and maybe you'll agree. Go with a Superflate or an
Ultraflate CO2. The reasons for this are too long for one paragraph,
so I'll spell it out in a numbered list:
1) the unit's about a lot cheaper, about 2/3 the price of a pump.
2) the CO2's for these are $8 for 25 in Wal-Mart. That's $0.32 each,
cheaper than most patches, so cost is not a big setback here.
3) the chuck fits presta and Schrader equaly well, *no adapter needed*
4) the whole thing fits into a seat bag or camelbak, 100% out of the
dirt and grit. I have *never* used a pump off-road where I didn't
have to first pull it apart and wipe the crap out before it would
work; on the other hand, I've never had a CO2 leak from crud. Which
brings us to:
5) the things are rugged, far tougher than most pumps.
6) finally, these things inflate fast. No small point when the yellow
flies are attacking your lycra.


One more tip, aimed at the previous reviewer who're worried about a fresh CO2 cart getting popped when it's stored in the inflater. Flip the thing around, so it's in the inflater the wrong way. The top can then be screwed in loosly, and the whole thing's safe untill it's needed.

It's darned seldom I come across something this good. I reccomend this thing without reservation, and wonder why the heck anyone even bothers making frame pumps anymore.

Similar Products Used:

Trek mini-pump, numerous loaners from friends, Ultraflate, Silca frame pump

[Oct 08, 1999]
Jim
Cross-Country Rider

OVERALL
RATING
3
VALUE
RATING
Strength:

small, pumps tire fast

Weakness:

have to buy new cartridges and carry the wasteful metal cartridges around.
difficult to regulate air.

Its is a good product if you only plan on getting one flat. It takes two cartridges to properly fill one tire. Don't plan on being able to help yourself or your friends if your having a bad day (i.e. too many flats) Also the pump itself is nice and small but then you have to carry around those CO2 cartidges making it total volume greater than and more awkward than that of a frame pump. I give it a few stars because it pumps your tire fast and Does what its intended to do. But I recommend getting a frame pump instead.

Similar Products Used:

Blackburn Kamikaze

[Jul 22, 1999]
Zach Lorden
Cross-Country Rider

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
Strength:

Fast, small, fully controlled w/ trigger

Weakness:

COLD!!

Get this! It inflates a road tire in 2 seconds (although you should partially inflate it to check that the tire's seated). It does take 2 or 3 cartridges to fill my mountain tires, though.

Similar Products Used:

Friend's frame pump

[Jul 07, 1999]
Scott
Cross-Country Rider

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
Strength:

Lightweight - minus CO2 cartridges. Fast inflate, cheap CO2's if unthreaded

Weakness:

18 bucks is a little steap, cant fit threaded cartridges in holder - can get really cold and burn you

if you are tired of giving your tires a hand job this is the ticket. Super fast inflation, easy to control air by trigger. Works with all CO2 cartridges (threaded/threadless) Best to go to gun/sports shop and pick up a gross of 16g co2 cartridges for about 10 bucks. Much cheaper than bike shop threaded models. Overall very pleased, won't carry a pump again!

Similar Products Used:

Standard pumps - Avenir, blackburn

[Jul 24, 2002]
mike
Racer

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
Strength:

Awesome, best pump ever, It is easy and simple to use, and does leak much, can take diff. kinds of CO2 which is a bonus.

Weakness:

nothing

the best pump you can buy,
it will never leak, and it can take diff. types of CO2 cartidges

Similar Products Used:

junk

[Dec 01, 1999]
Dave
Racer

OVERALL
RATING
3
VALUE
RATING
Strength:

Small, Inflates Quickly

Weakness:

O ring seal broke after 2 weeks

Nice for the first 2 weeks until the O Ring Seal broke causing the CO2 to leak out, had hard time with customer service trying to get another replacement quickly so I could use it for a race5 for the speed of air pressure, 1 for product life and customer service

Similar Products Used:

Zefal Mini Mountain Pump

[Oct 23, 2004]
Ed
Racer

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
4
Strength:

Easy to use, uses 12 or 16 gram cartridges,lightweight, stuffs into your jersey pocket very easily.

Weakness:

It is possible to run out of co2. You have to use the inflator correctly or it will not work and you will loose air (read the directions). Cold- I don't know if this stuff would work in really cold weather.

I've always had problems with pumps in general. The Rolf wheels on my other bike (Klein) uses long stem valves and I've snapped valve stems using frame or mini pumps and I've been stuck on the side of the road. The answer for me was co2. The Superflate is easy to use and you can control the amount of air going into your tube. It works like a gas station air hose, just press on and inflate. You can use one hand to inflate, not two, like some other co2 inflators (such as my old Serfas). My Superflate came with 2 16g cartridges, but I lost my under seat bad while on a ride and never used them. The 12g can be found in places such as Kmart or Wallmart in packs of 24 for around $.50 per cartridge. The 16g are expensive (around $4.50 per cartridge). I've never had problems finishing a ride with a 12g. I use a Torelli Mini pump (very small, about 6 inches) to mount my tire with about 30 pounds and finish off with a 12g c02. This is a good product for co2 users. The bad side it is possible to run out of c02, but I pack my Torelli as a backup (better than nothing).

Similar Products Used:

Serfas Air Pod Dual

[Sep 20, 1999]
Mark Gates
Cross-Country Rider

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
Strength:

much, much easier than pumping, compact

Weakness:

gets your stem and hands too @#$%in cold, easy to accidently hit trigger

I got this pump from a mail order place for a good deal, with 8 free cartridges. It fits nicely in my saddle pouch, and it's very easy to use. I don't care what the hard-core riders say, i'd much rather spend several seconds inflating a tire rather than several minutes. Of course, when you use this thing it about freezes both your stem and hand off. Also, I wish they could put some sort of trigger lock on the thing; whenever I put it in my saddle pouch, i'm afraid that something will depress the trigger, wasting a cartridge (which do deplete quickly.) Overall, it does what it's designed to do, and saves me a lot of work...sounds like 5 chilies to me...

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