Alternative pump for Nemo airbeam tent
I have a Nemo Morpho tent with inflatable airbeams and have somehow managed to lose the included foot pump. I've found a few US retailers with a replacement pump in stock (called 'Nemoid Foot Pump'), but living in Germany and needing the pump in a three weeks time, I am not sure if delivery and customs clearance will complete in time.
Update July 2018 - The question is still current, as I have not yet managed to find a replacement pump for the tent. The situation is however slightly different. Nemo, the manufacturer, seems not to produce the tent anymore and does not offer replacement parts anymore. I am right now not able to find any dealer world wide, which sells a replacement pump. If anyone knows the valve connector and can recommend a pump from a different manufacturer or knows where to get an original Nemo pump, I would still very much apprechiate an answer to this question.
As far as I can tell, the connector between the pump tube and the airbeam valve is a proprietary "click & close" system from Nemo.
Can anyone tell if they recognize the connector and perhaps suggest a pump from another manufacturer suitable for connecting to the Nemo tents?
Alternatively: There are several European dealers selling the tents or other products from Nemo, but noone seem to stock spare parts. If someone could suggest a European dealer able to send me the pump within a reasonable time, that would also solve my problem.
This post was sourced from https://outdoors.stackexchange.com/q/9097. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
1 answer
Nemo says their beams are 7-9 PSI
http://shield.nemoequipment.com/explore/technology/airsupported-technology/
Should be very easy to improvise a connection that will not leak. Get any pump rated for that pressure (it will be for a thing like an inflatable boat not a bicycle) which is of a size you can stand to carry, and find someone with a workshop in the garage or basement. My guess is with some off the shelf pump and maybe o-rings from a faucet you’ll be good to go.
Further note regarding pumps: Keep in mind that this kind of inflatable has two phases of inflation: phase one where the air goes in without any resistance (0 psi over atmospheric pressure) then phase two where it’s almost full and you need to force the last bit in (to 7-9 psi over atmospheric pressure). It’s this last phase where it gets structural strength. During phase one you want rapid airflow, pressure can be very low, virtually anything will work. Your lungs could do it but then you introduce moisture and bacteria so best avoided. A bellows, a bag that you squeeze would work. Whatever. During phase two you need enough pressure but not too much. You could use eveb a tiny bike pump or even squeeze bulb for this last little bit if you were patient and careful not to overpressure. If you know how the inflatable beam is supposed to feel you could just rely on squeezing it to keep from overpressuring.
This post was sourced from https://outdoors.stackexchange.com/a/20099. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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