It comes with a case. This is the digital version where it stops at the pressure you set it too, not to be confused with the one with the gauge.
they are sold under different brands and colours such as Ring or Rac and had one for couple of years. The best and easiest pump I've used, and has built in light.
Top Tech 12v Digital Multifunction Air Compressor This Digital Tyre Air Compressor is powerful enough for all passenger vehicles, and small enough to store in your boot, for an emergency.
With a high quality ABS Body, and a built in LED work light This Pump has everything you need, for HALF the normal price!
12v 200w Power
Screw on Valve connector for maximum grip
Self select pressure mode with automatic switch off
Fitted with 12v fused cigarette lighter socket allows it to be used in almost any vehicle.
Built in white light for direction and red light for emergency use.
Quidco - 16.5%
All comments (36)
vassy201187
4 Mar 16#1
BeerDrinker
4 Mar 161#2
Decent. Looks exactly like the Ring one that's £20 on Amazon
snoopy18
4 Mar 161#3
Thanks op
sradmad
4 Mar 161#4
nice find op, great price from a brilliant seller, heat added :smiley:
thekesslerboy
4 Mar 16#5
I've got the Ring version. 25 quid. It's worth it for the yellow buttons! Seriously, these are way better than the clockwork ones, where you have to guess if you've reached the right pressure. I used to pump the tyres up with those , with a dodgy lever attachment, then have to check them with a digital gauge, only to find they were still way low. These give you a bit more than you need which you lose when you unscrew the attachment. And they stop automatically when they reach the pressure you need.
friar_chris to thekesslerboy
5 Mar 161#23
You have to guess with an analogue scale?! Can you read an analogue scale? On mine I would need to 'guess' where a fifth of an division was at most. Even if you were to be a slightly above or below the ideal pressure, this uncertainty compared to the change in pressure over the time between most people checking their pressures, the changes in load (people, shopping and fuel) of the vehicle over that time, the mass of air which will escape, the changes in temperature day to day or the changes in tyre temperature over a journey are far greater, and far greater than the uncertainty in the s4!++y sensors they put into digital pumps. Digital pumps are easy, but dumb.
townterrier
4 Mar 161#6
Cheers OP, ordered...
nomnomnomnom
4 Mar 16#7
The digital ring version of this has a high failure rate (check Amazon) - the LCD / torch aspect often fails. I had to send mine back and I'm not the only one.
Loads of people on here recommend the gauge one and is the one I ended up with. It's also more accurate than the digital version, which was was a massive 5psi out on mine. The sensors in the 'digital' version are cheap and not accurate. At least with a gauge it's going to be reasonably close based on it's construction alone.
Opening post
It comes with a case. This is the digital version where it stops at the pressure you set it too, not to be confused with the one with the gauge.
they are sold under different brands and colours such as Ring or Rac and had one for couple of years. The best and easiest pump I've used, and has built in light.
Top Tech 12v Digital Multifunction Air Compressor This Digital Tyre Air Compressor is powerful enough for all passenger vehicles, and small enough to store in your boot, for an emergency.
With a high quality ABS Body, and a built in LED work light This Pump has everything you need, for HALF the normal price!
12v 200w Power
Screw on Valve connector for maximum grip
Self select pressure mode with automatic switch off
Fitted with 12v fused cigarette lighter socket allows it to be used in almost any vehicle.
Built in white light for direction and red light for emergency use.
Quidco - 16.5%
All comments (36)
Loads of people on here recommend the gauge one and is the one I ended up with. It's also more accurate than the digital version, which was was a massive 5psi out on mine. The sensors in the 'digital' version are cheap and not accurate. At least with a gauge it's going to be reasonably close based on it's construction alone.