Gyre
Well-known member
Product Image:
Product name: Fumpa miniFumpa
Price paid: $132 USD
Score (out of 10): 3
Review: I thought this little guy could have potential as a CO2 and pump replacement in hip packs where space is at a premium so I picked one up in September 2020 and it's been in my hip pack since.
It's reasonably compact by pump standards and doesn't create the same kind of waste as CO2 cartridges, should work on both road and mountain tires, plus since it pumps air instead of CO2 it should avoid the problem of causing latex to cure. Sounds good, right?
I never had to use it for its intended purpose because (knock on wood), I haven't had any flats since picking it up. However, it has some serious drawbacks:
- The battery isn't user-replaceable. The owner claims the battery is much more robust than typical commercial batteries and offered to replace the battery free of charge if it ever gets to be a problem (you pay shipping to Australia). Fair enough I suppose.
- It's loud as hell and sounds like an angry duck. Very annoying but most compressors are loud.
- The power button is exposed and can be easily activated inadvertently. I've had about 5 occasions in the past year when I have to do an emergency stop and perform the dig-through-the-pack-of-shame as it quacks away.
Considering that these things are incredibly expensive, the lack of protection for the power button is totally inexcusable. I suppose you could scare up an EVA case for it if you search hard enough, but it doesn't come with one and unless you had a custom-fit case it would probably add substantial bulk anyway.
Thumbs down.
Product name: Fumpa miniFumpa
Price paid: $132 USD
Score (out of 10): 3
Review: I thought this little guy could have potential as a CO2 and pump replacement in hip packs where space is at a premium so I picked one up in September 2020 and it's been in my hip pack since.
It's reasonably compact by pump standards and doesn't create the same kind of waste as CO2 cartridges, should work on both road and mountain tires, plus since it pumps air instead of CO2 it should avoid the problem of causing latex to cure. Sounds good, right?
I never had to use it for its intended purpose because (knock on wood), I haven't had any flats since picking it up. However, it has some serious drawbacks:
- The battery isn't user-replaceable. The owner claims the battery is much more robust than typical commercial batteries and offered to replace the battery free of charge if it ever gets to be a problem (you pay shipping to Australia). Fair enough I suppose.
- It's loud as hell and sounds like an angry duck. Very annoying but most compressors are loud.
- The power button is exposed and can be easily activated inadvertently. I've had about 5 occasions in the past year when I have to do an emergency stop and perform the dig-through-the-pack-of-shame as it quacks away.
Considering that these things are incredibly expensive, the lack of protection for the power button is totally inexcusable. I suppose you could scare up an EVA case for it if you search hard enough, but it doesn't come with one and unless you had a custom-fit case it would probably add substantial bulk anyway.
Thumbs down.