| | |  |  Pumps | Home » » » » Topeak Mini Morph Bike Pump | | | | | | | Description: | | The Mini Morph is small but fills both fat and skinny tires with ease. - Head: Presta/Schrader
- High efficiency Single Action pump with thumblock lever
- Flexible hose for easy filling and fold-down foot pads for easy pumping
- Plastic/Kraton T-handle
- Barrel: Butted Aluminum
- Mounting Bracket Included
- Capacity 160 PSI/ 11 bar
| Item Specifications |
|---|
| Color | Silver/Black | | Weight | 170g | | PSI | 160PSI | | Length | 260mm |
| | | Features: | |
• 170 g / 0.37 lb
• 160 psi/ 11 bar Capacity
• Presta/Schrader
• Single Action Pump w/Fold Out Foot Pad
• Hassle Free Inflation
| | | Product Details: | | | Product Length:
| 1.57 inches | | Product Width:
| 3.94 inches | | Product Height:
| 13.98 inches | | Product Weight:
| 2.0 pounds | | Package Length:
| 11.7 inches | | Package Width:
| 3.7 inches | | Package Height:
| 0.5 inches | | Package Weight:
| 0.5 pounds | | Average Customer Rating:
| based on 33 reviews |
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| | Customer Reviews: | |
Average Customer Review:
( 33 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
15 of 17 found the following review helpful:
Great pump not too miniMar 15, 2008
By C. Crandell
"Bike addict"
I really like this pump. I've had three other frame pumps they all have been difficult to fill to road pressure and they have bent my presta valve. This pump allows me to pump my road tire to nearly full pressure without damaging my presta valve. I have a 50 cm compact frame and this pump is too large to be attached to the seat tube. If it were much smaller though it would take forever to fill a tire. The only other complaint I have is the way the pump is attached to the frame. If you use the bottle cage mount you lose a bottle cage. If they had just offset the mount from the bottle cage you could use both. I've chosen to use the zip tie attachment which will lead to scratches on the frame. That being said I am planning on purchasing another one of these for my other bike.
8 of 8 found the following review helpful:
the best portable road bike pumpFeb 16, 2011
By l2 I've been using this pump for years. It still works perfectly. This model is lighter weight and less bulky than the bigger Topeak Road Morph pumps. The tradeoff is that you have to pump the Mini-Morph twice as many strokes to fill up your tires. I need around 200 strokes to pump a flat tire up to 100psi (a few minutes of pumping) vs 100 strokes (and half the time) for the regular Topeak Road Morph pump. I don't get many flats, so I don't mind the extra workout. For people who do get a lot of flats, I would recommend their bigger pumps instead.
Note that the main advantage of the "Morph" pumps vs. other types of portable bicycle pumps is the attached hose makes it almost impossible to tear the valve stem when pumping. I've seen lots of people do that with pumps that do not have the hose. If you carry only one spare tube on the road, you really do not want to ruin it when pumping.
3 of 3 found the following review helpful:
EssentialJan 28, 2012
By A guy from Philly This is the smallest portable pump with a hose and foot pad. One-piece hand-pumps just aren't' worth using- you can never get enough pressure and it's too easy to break the stem. It would be nice if this pump had a pressure gauge. The only thing I don't like about it is that it's a little hard to get the valve pieces out to switch between schrader and presta,
2 of 2 found the following review helpful:
probably as good as a very tiny pump with hose can getMar 05, 2012
By CK After practicing with this a few times this afternoon I can understand why some people give lower ratings for this pump. You are going to have to pump it many, many more times and it will give you quite a workout - no mini-pump can get around that fact because of how tiny the cylinder is.
This is a very small pump and no brand of mini-pump can ever be as good as a full size pump.
However the build quality on this is quite nice. Took me a few minutes to figure out how to switch the value around from presta to schrader as there are no written instructions, just an easy-to-miss, unlabeled diagram on the package. Once that was done, I found the foot pedal and flip out handle not just a convenience but very necessary to fill a full size mountain bike tire and cannot imagine using a mini-pump without those features.
The main attraction of this brand/model is you do not have to worry about ripping off or damaging your valve stem as you might do with other mini-pumps that directly attach, since this has a shop-quality hose that isolates the push and pull strain.
So, for occasional or emergency use, extremely handy. But you will not want this as your primary pump, it's quite a workout to inflate from empty.
Mountain bikers with large tire volumes might want to look at the "mountain morph" instead which has a larger cylinder - if your bike frame or pack has the few extra inches it needs:
Mini Morph 10"x2"x1" 6oz Mountain Morph 14"x2"x1" 9oz
The other mini-pump with a hose and pedal that I considered was the Blackburn AirStik LongNeck EVO but it was nearly ten dollars more expensive at this time and it's hose does not look as solid as the topeak.
2 of 2 found the following review helpful:
Awesome pump, much better than little hand pumps.Sep 22, 2010
By Michael The stand on this pump really makes it awesome. It pumps my 50 psi tire with no problem (I actually overinflated once on accident, but that was my mistake). Being able to push downward is SO MUCH EASIER than those little hand pumps that wear your arms out. Make sure you READ THE DIRECTIONS, though. I almost broke mine because I didn't understand how it worked.
See all 33 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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