Remember to help out your fellow cyclists that use CO2cartridges.
On Nov 30, 12:54*pm, SMS wrote:
Jorg Lueke wrote: On Nov 30, 9:09 am, SMS wrote: After he was done with the pump he thanked me, and I said something like "how come you don't carry a pump?" (since he had spare tubes and patches and tire levers), and he said 'I use CO2, but I got two flats and I didn't have enough.' I guess I never understood the logic of carrying CO2 versus carrying an infinite supply of air via a tiny pump like the Topeak Micro Rocket, which weighs 65 gm versus two 16 gram CO2 cartridges (117 grams), since you still need the CO2 inflater. The logic is pretty simple. *The CO2 will work a lot faster than a little hand pump. The hand pumps can be quite frustrating to properly fill a tube. Wow, I've never been frustrated using a hand pump. Granted I'm not using the really tiny pumps, just the small pumps. I have, that's why I mentioned it. It was probably just a crappy pump or just too small. |
Remember to help out your fellow cyclists that use CO2cartridges.
On Dec 2, 9:13*pm, Phil W Lee phil(at)lee-family(dot)me(dot)uk
wrote: Jorg Lueke considered Tue, 2 Dec 2008 11:08:45 -0800 (PST) the perfect time to write: On Nov 30, 12:15*pm, "PatTX" wrote: :: After he was done with the pump he thanked me, and I said something :: like "how come you don't carry a pump?" (since he had spare tubes :: and patches and tire levers), and he said 'I use CO2, but I got two :: flats and I didn't have enough.' I guess I never understood the :: logic of carrying CO2 versus carrying an infinite supply of air via :: a tiny pump like the Topeak Micro Rocket, which weighs 65 gm versus :: two 16 gram CO2 cartridges (117 grams), since you still need the CO2 :: inflater. SMS : : The logic is pretty simple. *The CO2 will work a lot faster than a : little hand pump. : The hand pumps can be quite frustrating to properly fill a tube. : : Now the logic on measuring things to the gram is something that : escapes me. Jorg You missed his point. He was saying, more or less "What do you do after you use up all of your CO2 cartridges and then get another flat?" *I carry CO2, but I also carry a Topeak pump. It's the Boy Scout motto: *"Be Prepared!" Pat in TX I've never had more than one flat at a time. *I can see it if you run into some nasty debris. *That's when you call your wife ;) *I don't see any issue in carrying both. What, CO2 and a wife? Man, and I thought using CO2 was expensive! |
Remember to help out your fellow cyclists that use CO2 cartridges.
Brian Huntley wrote:
On Dec 2, 9:13 pm, Phil W Lee phil(at)lee-family(dot)me(dot)uk wrote: Jorg Lueke considered Tue, 2 Dec 2008 11:08:45 -0800 (PST) the perfect time to write: On Nov 30, 12:15 pm, "PatTX" wrote: :: After he was done with the pump he thanked me, and I said something :: like "how come you don't carry a pump?" (since he had spare tubes :: and patches and tire levers), and he said 'I use CO2, but I got two :: flats and I didn't have enough.' I guess I never understood the :: logic of carrying CO2 versus carrying an infinite supply of air via :: a tiny pump like the Topeak Micro Rocket, which weighs 65 gm versus :: two 16 gram CO2 cartridges (117 grams), since you still need the CO2 :: inflater. SMS : : The logic is pretty simple. The CO2 will work a lot faster than a : little hand pump. : The hand pumps can be quite frustrating to properly fill a tube. : : Now the logic on measuring things to the gram is something that : escapes me. Jorg You missed his point. He was saying, more or less "What do you do after you use up all of your CO2 cartridges and then get another flat?" I carry CO2, but I also carry a Topeak pump. It's the Boy Scout motto: "Be Prepared!" Pat in TX I've never had more than one flat at a time. I can see it if you run into some nasty debris. That's when you call your wife ;) I don't see any issue in carrying both. What, CO2 and a wife? Man, and I thought using CO2 was expensive! Yeah, tandems ain't cheap. -- Tom Sherman - 42.435731,-83.985007 LOCAL CACTUS EATS CYCLIST - datakoll |
Remember to help out your fellow cyclists that use CO2cartridges.
On Dec 2, 8:13*pm, Phil W Lee phil(at)lee-family(dot)me(dot)uk
wrote: Jorg Lueke considered Tue, 2 Dec 2008 11:08:45 -0800 (PST) the perfect time to write: On Nov 30, 12:15*pm, "PatTX" wrote: :: After he was done with the pump he thanked me, and I said something :: like "how come you don't carry a pump?" (since he had spare tubes :: and patches and tire levers), and he said 'I use CO2, but I got two :: flats and I didn't have enough.' I guess I never understood the :: logic of carrying CO2 versus carrying an infinite supply of air via :: a tiny pump like the Topeak Micro Rocket, which weighs 65 gm versus :: two 16 gram CO2 cartridges (117 grams), since you still need the CO2 :: inflater. SMS : : The logic is pretty simple. *The CO2 will work a lot faster than a : little hand pump. : The hand pumps can be quite frustrating to properly fill a tube. : : Now the logic on measuring things to the gram is something that : escapes me. Jorg You missed his point. He was saying, more or less "What do you do after you use up all of your CO2 cartridges and then get another flat?" *I carry CO2, but I also carry a Topeak pump. It's the Boy Scout motto: *"Be Prepared!" Pat in TX I've never had more than one flat at a time. *I can see it if you run into some nasty debris. *That's when you call your wife ;) *I don't see any issue in carrying both. What, CO2 and a wife?- Hide quoted text - Well yeah, who makes your snacks on a long ride? |
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