I wanted to show off a personal project I spent many months on (designing, testing, building).

After some extremely long rides into remote areas, such as my 14 hour ride from Denver to the top of Mt Evans/Blue Sky and back, I wanted to create a bike pump that was infinitely reliable (all metal/overbuilt design/no plastic/batteries) and also would fit in a tiny seat post bag. It would also be small enough to pair with CO2 cartridges as a last resort if the CO2 ran out.

I settled on a design that would fit directly onto a presta valve stem- no rubber tubes or attachments to add weight or potentially fail or add complexity.

I created the computer aided design (CAD) in Fusion 360 and added drawings and tolerances for important components (I'm a mechanical engineer with 15 years of designing >100 products for tool/defense/medical companies. This is my first solo build of a product for myself).

I ran finite element analysis in Fusion 360 to ensure that everything was overbuilt (A casing that was laughably designed to hold many thousands of PSI, for example, when it would only see about 100 psi). This would ensure it would survive drops, impacts, crashes, etc (I did take a 35mph, worst crash of my life, with this pump, and it obviously did not suffer ill effects, like I did)

My initial 3D print and then metal prototype build had a tiny handle that was extremely uncomfortable, and gave me blisters, so I added a large, thick, and comfortable aluminum handle that gave it a "flash bang" aesthetic. Then, I added neodymium magnets for quick latching and a sort of fidget mechanic.

I purchased a simple reciprocating jig and tested the O-rings, lubricants, and seals to a million cycles at 130F and running high pressures.

For my final build, I sent out the drawings and CAD to a CNC shop for the parts to be manufactured. I received enough parts for about 300 pumps (it's much more cost effective per unit to order a lot of parts than even just a few). When these parts arrived, I assembled them by hand and give them a mirror polish.

Overall, I'm very happy with the results and carry it everywhere for my bikes and even my car (God forbid).

It takes about 2 minutes to add a few psi and about 10 minutes for a completely flat tire. My rationale for this is: Flat tires are rare with tubeless, at most, one per year. It can be combined with CO2 or electric as a final last resort pump, if you get frequent flats (CO2 and electric being less reliable/limited). I would rather carry a very small/light pump for two thousand plus miles a year and spend ten minutes on the side of the road once per year, than carrying a large pump all year for this rare occasion (but this is just my experience and opinion).

I've posted this project on Etsy and I sell about 1 per month, so I plan to break even on my expenditure in like 2030 (haha) (It's been a passion project). I named it the Featherforged: nanotap (seemed like a fitting name for an ultralight/full-metal project). I would like to design more all-metal/ultralight tools in the future.

I wanted to share this design and hear some thoughts and opinions on this project.

by Featherforged

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18 Comments

  1. Edit: You did a (presumably) nice job and I would consider this if it is under 30g.  

    The only problem is that when it is overbuilt, it is heavier.  Barbieri makes a super tiny carbon fiber pump that fits most of these points for $19 on bikeinn and probably is both faster to pump and lighter.  

    So I would have liked to see the pump be designed to be just strong enough to survive its usage and not have to last 50 years of hard use, especially since you note that it will at most be used once or twice a year at most. 
     
    What is the overall weight?  That is a second important point for roadies (weight weenies) and a super micro mini pump is less useful for gravel with larger tire volumes as well.    

  2. How well does this work with valves half clogged with sealant? As soon as you pump a wee bit harder with a small lever, it’s hard to do in a smooth manner, I could see this maybe causing valve stems to crack?

  3. Seems like very thorough lab testing. Looks very nice. I may have missed it but I did not see a price listed. How has your customer feedback been? Maybe post this over on r/invention too?

  4. Des_ist_mir_wurscht on

    This looks AMAZING. As a cyclist in the Netherlands I would love to buy one! I am always always on my bike and cannot be bothered with these tiny crap ones. I’ve also done longer multi-day trips and if you’re doing 1500km this would be great, even with the 10 min pump time for a flat.

  5. Amazing, just ordered one! I’ve been wanting to do the same thing for a while, design a compact pump for my bike. But just haven’t had the time… I have the same Ornot saddle bag as you show in the Etsy listing. Can’t wait to get it!

  6. fractalrotation on

    Dude this is sick. Kudos from a fellow MechE. I’ve been wanting to design my own project for some time.

  7. HolmesMycroft9172 on

    Doesn’t that put a lot of stress on your valve tube ? I can definitely see it working on regular butyl rubber tubes with steel valve tubes, but TPU plastic doesn’t seem strong enough 🤷🏼‍♂️

  8. therealtwomartinis on

    my unsolicited feedback – make a clip accessory that stabilizes the pump between the adjacent spokes

  9. Just some thoughts from a testing side.

    1. Can you reseat a tire with it?
    2. Does it handle clogged valves?
    3. Have you built a jig to test it to failure?

  10. Very cool design, but I’m worried about the practicality.

    Can it reasonably be used to pump up road bike tires (60+ PSI)?

    How long does it take to pump up a flat 29-er MTB tire?

    Can you easily grab the handle between the spokes of the wheel?

    How hot does the cylinder get after prolonged pumping?

  11. ThinLeadership9604 on

    That is sexy. Great documentation, where can I buy? Or if it’s not ready for sale, can I help test??

  12. SecurityBroad6411 on

    I love the design! Looks like you’ve done the work and created something useful, order placed 🙂

  13. Seems like a cool project. Will be interested to hear about long term testing. Personally I have the opposite philosophy on pumps which is I want one that’s easy to actually get a tire up to pressure with fairly quickly. I have the Topeak Road Morph which fits nicely in my custom half-frame bag, and I’m constantly lending it to people on group rides so they can actually pump up their flats pretty quickly instead of spending 20 minutes furiously pumping on some little mini thing.

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