i do roadside service for a living and use this exact same setup for work. i love it. one battery generally can fill 10 tires from 0 to 35psi. also, instead of calling a towtruck and spending 2 hours and 200 bucs for a tow, you could always put on your spare tire.
I’ve had this for my bicycle workshop for 4 years now. Used every week and never a problem. Well designed and durable. Works well for my LandRover tyres too.
I got one for Christmas. It seems the curse of the "Tire Pressure Monitoring System" on these new vehicles, along with the hot and cold weather we have been having causing the tire monitoring system to show low tire pressure. This little device will keep my tires pressure monitoring system happy !
You can keep checking the battery it won't matter. I think we finally found the match for the Energizer bunny. I can easily maintain 4 vehicles tires during the colder months and not have to recharge my battery. Absolutely love this product. Considering getting the new P747 model and looking for some comparisons.
This also works well to inflate basketballs, footballs, soccer balls etc. It even comes with a needle for that purpose and a small compartment to store the needle.
I’ve had this for about a week now. It’s July. So I’ve used it for beach toys, backyard inflatable pools and air mattresses for my visiting family... I got to say, WOW! It’s amazing for the size and price. It has replaced my Coleman inflator. I’ve also used it for bike tires, and basketballs and footballs.. it’s so easy to use!
Got already 3rd piece of this tool. When inflating my road bike tires (130 psi), in 1st case the inner piston died, in 2nd case the safety valve died. I use both high pressure / high volume modes and the whole pressure spectrum offered by this tool: air-balls + inflatable dinghy for my little son, car tires (30 psi), MTB tires (45 psi), my son´s bike tires, (60 psi) road bike tires (130 psi).
+Martin Abrman Sounds like very high pressures add to the shortened life.....luckily it has a 3yr warranty. I have had no issues with vehicle/trailer tires & have inflated over 50 of them without issue with this.
+Real Tool Reviews not sure, if here in Czech republic the warranty is also 3 years, I would expect just 2. Yes, when inflating on smaller pressure, there is no issue. If you can, try to test it with inflating on higher pressures.
Mine works great - much better than dragging out 75 foot of air hose from the garage to our vehicles. A note, with the 6 amp battery it will sit on the battery. I don't have any of the new 9 amp jobs but it would even more unstable. Well worth the money.
This looks awesome, especially being able to dial in the psi you want is really cool. I wish Ridgid would come put with a tool like this. Power tools are cool, but it sucks that everyone has there own battery kinda locking you into their brand. I really want this!
+Bigchuck678 Thanks! I agree.....I actually just used this last week to fix a flat tire on my dads truck in the driveway (plugged it & pumped it back up while he sat on the tailgate!).
Especially since Ridgid and Ryobi are owned by the same company (TTI). All they would have to do is to build some of the inflators with orange housings instead of lime and change the battery slot. That's basically what they did with the impact wrench. If you compare the Ryobi and Ridgid impact wrenches they are essentially identical except for the color of the housing.
Angel Esp Thanks Angel! I use this inflator all the time to top-off our car tires....on the vehicles, lawnmowers, and trailers. The battery lasts a very long time between charges.
Your initial concern about 4 ampere hour battery pack extending beyond the feet was not found it, but is indeed founded if you try to use 6 ampere hour battery pack.
Looks like a neat little product. A little confused as to the inclusion of the deflator on it though. I'm pretty sure we used to just put a small stick in the tube and let it empty out. Having a compressor in the garage and a nice 12 volt dc compressor in my truck, I can't really see a use for me personally. Good review though, as always! Thank you for uploading!
I mainly use this to inflate my presta valve bicycle tires to about 115 psi. It works great for that but two of them stopped working over the past 3 years so I question the longevity of it.
Hahaha.....yes, for some people it would. But lets face it, MANY people cannot even figure out how to change their own oil.....this would be a lot more ideal.
A lot of vehicles no longer come with a spare tire. I advise people to buy one but hey, that's money and some people assume they won't need a spare, until they do !
That's awesome how you can set the psi, never seen that before. I had a ni-cad battery that i hooked up via alligator clips to my 100psi compressor and it barely spun the motor, haha..
Milwaukee Electric Tool Corporation. The Milwaukee Electric Tool Corporation is a brand of Techtronic Industries, along with AEG, Ryobi, Hoover, Dirt Devil and Vax.
It's a shame they didn't put a filter canister on it so it could double as a vac cleaner. Ryobi used to make a cordless wet/dry vac and many people miss that tool in their lineup.
Hello! Im interested about how accurate is this inflator? I've watched many other youtube videos about this inflator but nobody checks for example is 35 psi really that with this Ryobi, or is it something else.
What's the maximum continuing running time of these .. ? Most of those compressors cannot run any longer than 15 minutes before they're running hot. How was the temperature of the device after inflating that tire? (and just saying, you could also just put a hand/feet pump into the trunk so you don't need to pay a couple 100s for a tow truck .. normally those hand pumps inflate the tire faster.)
thanks, the booklet that came with it really does not cover how to use it. I also bought the battery charger for the car. So if need to recharge the battery on the road (traveling, camping, etc) can still use this.
Yes, the manual is not so good, and the way you set the pressure and power up is not terribly intuitive. But, there is a label on the unit itself that goes step-by-step which order to set the pressure and Power It Up.
Has anyone used this for sled riding? I have some sno-tubes that take truck inner tubes and was wondering how long it would take to inflate one to a round shape like he showed with the high volume pump. I have several tubes but they won't fit in the car and so I would need to air them up when we arrive.
Seriously? All you need to deflate a tire is any pointed object like your key. However no, I don't think the deflate can be set to a PSI for tires but it doesn't really matter at low speed on a beach, to hit a specific low PSI like load and speed on a highway needs specific higher PSI. You can just eyeball the tire to see a little sag. On the other hand, you shouldn't need to deflate tires on a beach, maybe your vehicle or tires are just unsuited for off-road.
Karl Reamer you mean to air down for sand driving? Push the pin in the centre of the valve, use a pointed object, match stick etc. You don't need a deflator to let air out of a tire.
The jump boxes have the tiniest air compressors you can find anywhere, are very slow, very hot running, need to be allowed to cool down after every few minutes of use. I wouldn't recommend them for more than airing up a bicycle or lawn equipment, but for those uses they are very handy.
Does this tool vary the pressure at which the air is being pumped out? I would be interested if I could adjust the psi down below 50. I'm not referring to the psi level for...say a tire. I would like to adjust the pressure at the tip of the hose nozzle/adapter. Thanks!!!
That's not how any of them work. They output a volume and the pressure increases until the desired level. You may be misunderstanding what you think you need.
Have you tried changing the units from PSI to either of the other two? Mine will not change, just wondering if yours does. Ryobi says exchange it, just figured I would see if anyone else even tried.
I set mine to 37, hook it to my car tire, press inflate and two seconds later it shows me 135 PSI!? This works great on sports equipment but I think I got a LEMON?
You probably figured out what you did wrong by now, but for others reading this you have to make sure the air chuck is fully seated on the valve stem otherwise you will only be building pressure in the hose.
buzzj89 Its a shame that all cordless tools dont use the same battery platforms (like a standard wall plug on power tools)....but, for the money...I think that they Ryobi lineup is great all the way around. Especially when you are looking at tools like this or the Airstrike Nailers.
Especially since Milwaukee and Ryobi are both owned by TTI. Hey at least you guys get the wet/dry shop vac. I would eat a live kitten to get Ryobi to make one of those, 2 if they made a hybrid one.
Any idea as to what CFM the high pressure side of this will provide. Please refer to the following video by Matt Bernstein:ruclips.net/video/W68UsPbs1Go/видео.html. The idea is to create a portable cylinder leakage tester. I'm wondering if this inflator would have sufficient air volume to power the cylinder leakage tester. Check out the video and let me know if you think this would do a better job than the 12V model he tried out.
If you have a flat tire with a nail in it or a leaking flat also you're at nowhere at some places.You shouldn't have recommended people tries using this thing pumping it up the tire and driving their car.Don't know if you're close to a gas station or mechanic garage.Should always change it to a spare tire or call a toll truck for your safety and well being.
+Chi Chu I'll assume by your comment that you've never gotten a nail in your tire. The air doesn't instantly leak out...normally it takes days or weeks to drop down, but people don't know it until the tire pressure sensor finally goes off. 99% of the time, this would be the ideal choice.
Whatever made you notice your tire was getting low, will be the same thing that tells you if it's getting low again. Often you only need a few miles to get the vehicle to a service station or tire store, or to a safe area to change the tire (no soft shoulder nor on the interstate any longer than necessary for safety, especially late at night), or possibly you just need to drive a few miles to get to an area with cell phone coverage. Plus, some people, especially women and the elderly, don't realize that the !@#$ last place that worked on their vehicle, put the wheels back on with an impact wrench so tight that you'll end up snapping the lug studs off trying to get the nuts loose, if you can even generate that much torque with the crappy comes-with-vehicle tire wrench. However, despite the mess taking the tire off later, I am a fan of the "Fix A flat" products in a can instead of taking an air compressor with me everywhere. They take up less space, cost less, attempt to seal the tire and can't help but slow a leak if the tire holds air at all. Keep in mind that some people would take a $5 tire patch tool with them so if it were a screw or nail, etc, they would just pull the screw out, put the patch in, inflate the tire, and not have to do anything more to it for the life of the tire, so long as the hole isn't in the sidewall.
Well.....as I said in the video, this is a bare tool for $40.....the vast majority of people buying one will already have Ryobi batteries & chargers. This is exactly the same as ANY other cordless tool.
i do roadside service for a living and use this exact same setup for work. i love it. one battery generally can fill 10 tires from 0 to 35psi.
also, instead of calling a towtruck and spending 2 hours and 200 bucs for a tow, you could always put on your spare tire.
Jonathan Murray yup so true with the 4ah battery
You're assuming that the car has a spare, which many newer cars do not.
@@mammlouk they have spare savers.
I’ve had this for my bicycle workshop for 4 years now. Used every week and never a problem. Well designed and durable. Works well for my LandRover tyres too.
I got one for Christmas. It seems the curse of the "Tire Pressure Monitoring System" on these new vehicles, along with the hot and cold weather we have been having causing the tire monitoring system to show low tire pressure. This little device will keep my tires pressure monitoring system happy !
You can keep checking the battery it won't matter. I think we finally found the match for the Energizer bunny. I can easily maintain 4 vehicles tires during the colder months and not have to recharge my battery. Absolutely love this product. Considering getting the new P747 model and looking for some comparisons.
Wish they would have made this a hybrid plug in too
This also works well to inflate basketballs, footballs, soccer balls etc. It even comes with a needle for that purpose and a small compartment to store the needle.
This is probably my most used tool, huge fan of ryobi tools line
My favorite tool reviewer.. I always check your channel before buying any tools . 👍🏼
I’m about to order one! This is good for my son’s inflatable pool and toys! And we family coming to visit soon, it’ll help a lot for our air mattress
I’ve had this for about a week now. It’s July. So I’ve used it for beach toys, backyard inflatable pools and air mattresses for my visiting family... I got to say, WOW! It’s amazing for the size and price. It has replaced my Coleman inflator. I’ve also used it for bike tires, and basketballs and footballs.. it’s so easy to use!
Ryobi has been killing it
Love this tool and ryobi tools have a lot of batteries and tools and it one of their best products on the market
This vieo goes more indepth than most but i would like to have seen you do a totally flat tire and how many tires it would do
Got already 3rd piece of this tool. When inflating my road bike tires (130 psi), in 1st case the inner piston died, in 2nd case the safety valve died. I use both high pressure / high volume modes and the whole pressure spectrum offered by this tool: air-balls + inflatable dinghy for my little son, car tires (30 psi), MTB tires (45 psi), my son´s bike tires, (60 psi) road bike tires (130 psi).
+Martin Abrman Sounds like very high pressures add to the shortened life.....luckily it has a 3yr warranty. I have had no issues with vehicle/trailer tires & have inflated over 50 of them without issue with this.
+Real Tool Reviews not sure, if here in Czech republic the warranty is also 3 years, I would expect just 2. Yes, when inflating on smaller pressure, there is no issue. If you can, try to test it with inflating on higher pressures.
If you want extreme pressures then you should buy a pump specifically designed for that.
Mine works great - much better than dragging out 75 foot of air hose from the garage to our vehicles. A note, with the 6 amp battery it will sit on the battery. I don't have any of the new 9 amp jobs but it would even more unstable. Well worth the money.
This looks awesome, especially being able to dial in the psi you want is really cool. I wish Ridgid would come put with a tool like this. Power tools are cool, but it sucks that everyone has there own battery kinda locking you into their brand. I really want this!
+Bigchuck678 Thanks! I agree.....I actually just used this last week to fix a flat tire on my dads truck in the driveway (plugged it & pumped it back up while he sat on the tailgate!).
Especially since Ridgid and Ryobi are owned by the same company (TTI). All they would have to do is to build some of the inflators with orange housings instead of lime and change the battery slot. That's basically what they did with the impact wrench. If you compare the Ryobi and Ridgid impact wrenches they are essentially identical except for the color of the housing.
Really nice, like that you can set the psi and not have to be watching the gauge .
Angel Esp Thanks Angel! I use this inflator all the time to top-off our car tires....on the vehicles, lawnmowers, and trailers. The battery lasts a very long time between charges.
Your initial concern about 4 ampere hour battery pack extending beyond the feet was not found it, but is indeed founded if you try to use 6 ampere hour battery pack.
Love the 40-year old Michigan bicentenial plate!
Awesome demonstration video! Exactly what I needed to convince the Wife. 👍
I'm buying this. I have a jk and it's perfect when you air down the tires and want to come back safely.
mextijuas5 Good move! I carry mine around in the back of the vehicle 100% of the time.....you never know when you will need it!
Looks like a neat little product. A little confused as to the inclusion of the deflator on it though. I'm pretty sure we used to just put a small stick in the tube and let it empty out. Having a compressor in the garage and a nice 12 volt dc compressor in my truck, I can't really see a use for me personally. Good review though, as always! Thank you for uploading!
Robert Johnson Thanks! The deflator is the intake suction port...the inflator is the exhaust port (same fan unit).
I mainly use this to inflate my presta valve bicycle tires to about 115 psi. It works great for that but two of them stopped working over the past 3 years so I question the longevity of it.
It looks like a 6 amp hour battery might stick out proud from the bottom of the unit. Have you checked that?
nice review. but instead of calling a tow truck. wouldn't it be better to put on the spare tire.
Hahaha.....yes, for some people it would. But lets face it, MANY people cannot even figure out how to change their own oil.....this would be a lot more ideal.
A lot of vehicles no longer come with a spare tire. I advise people to buy one but hey, that's money and some people assume they won't need a spare, until they do !
In this day and age a lot of times the only spare tire in a car is on the driver's midsection...
like the air compressor part of it but the inflater seemed under powered to what ive seen on the market great vid
Djthunder PSN Thanks! And keep in mind this is battery powered & $40....not hundreds of dollars ;)
That's awesome how you can set the psi, never seen that before. I had a ni-cad battery that i hooked up via alligator clips to my 100psi compressor and it barely spun the motor, haha..
David G Ha nice :) It really is a nice feature to be able to set a certain PSI & have it cut itself off once it gets there.
Very cool of you to make this video It helped me a lot Thank you
I wish that Milwaukee would make one of those
Write them, maybe if they get enough letters they will.
I have the Ryobi, drill, flashlight and circular saw.
This is my wish list for Christmas.
Milwaukee and ryobi are both owned by techtronic tools
Milwaukee Electric Tool Corporation. The Milwaukee Electric Tool Corporation is a brand of Techtronic Industries, along with AEG, Ryobi, Hoover, Dirt Devil and Vax.
They sell a m12 tire inflator, but damnit I need an m12 tube inflator....
Why did I just sell my Ryobi stuff and buy Milwaukee.... FML
good job...love the dial in psi settings....awesome for 40 bucks
Jody Reed Thanks Jody! This is one of my favorite Ryobi tools....$40 is a steal.
It's a shame they didn't put a filter canister on it so it could double as a vac cleaner. Ryobi used to make a cordless wet/dry vac and many people miss that tool in their lineup.
It doesn't have the volume for a vacuum cleaner. It is made for it is made for.
They still do make a wet/dry vac
Hello! Im interested about how accurate is this inflator? I've watched many other youtube videos about this inflator but nobody checks for example is 35 psi really that with this Ryobi, or is it something else.
What's the maximum continuing running time of these .. ? Most of those compressors cannot run any longer than 15 minutes before they're running hot. How was the temperature of the device after inflating that tire?
(and just saying, you could also just put a hand/feet pump into the trunk so you don't need to pay a couple 100s for a tow truck .. normally those hand pumps inflate the tire faster.)
thanks, the booklet that came with it really does not cover how to use it. I also bought the battery charger for the car. So if need to recharge the battery on the road (traveling, camping, etc) can still use this.
Yes, the manual is not so good, and the way you set the pressure and power up is not terribly intuitive. But, there is a label on the unit itself that goes step-by-step which order to set the pressure and Power It Up.
How far could a 2amh battery go? I would still chuck in a manual pump just in case. I do have a 4amh battery(not hp), but the cold boot could kill it
Has anyone used this for sled riding? I have some sno-tubes that take truck inner tubes and was wondering how long it would take to inflate one to a round shape like he showed with the high volume pump. I have several tubes but they won't fit in the car and so I would need to air them up when we arrive.
wonder what the difference between the p731 and the p737 is?
can you deflate an suv tire for going on the beach?
Seriously? All you need to deflate a tire is any pointed object like your key. However no, I don't think the deflate can be set to a PSI for tires but it doesn't really matter at low speed on a beach, to hit a specific low PSI like load and speed on a highway needs specific higher PSI. You can just eyeball the tire to see a little sag. On the other hand, you shouldn't need to deflate tires on a beach, maybe your vehicle or tires are just unsuited for off-road.
Karl Reamer you mean to air down for sand driving? Push the pin in the centre of the valve, use a pointed object, match stick etc. You don't need a deflator to let air out of a tire.
have you ever done a video on jump boxes with air compressors? they have cell chargers and lights, I use mine a lot, Walmart $100 750 starter amps
The jump boxes have the tiniest air compressors you can find anywhere, are very slow, very hot running, need to be allowed to cool down after every few minutes of use. I wouldn't recommend them for more than airing up a bicycle or lawn equipment, but for those uses they are very handy.
Will the high pressure side accept a blow gun nozzle?
It’s not high pressure with any sort of reserve capacity. So no, it wouldn’t work for that. There is no storage tank.
Would this work well to blow saw dust off table saws, work surfaces and other tools while cleaning up?
+mulcahy bizarro no, there is no tank --- only a pump that can connect directly to your tire/etc.
So it cannot set a psi for high volumes inflation?
Can you add air without presetting the psi ?
Does this tool vary the pressure at which the air is being pumped out? I would be interested if I could adjust the psi down below 50.
I'm not referring to the psi level for...say a tire. I would like to adjust the pressure at the tip of the hose nozzle/adapter. Thanks!!!
That's not how any of them work. They output a volume and the pressure increases until the desired level. You may be misunderstanding what you think you need.
Can you also use this for compressed air to clean up a workspace, etc?
Unfortunately no, it doesn’t have a storage tank.
So what is the max psi?? IE Duley tires?
Have you tried changing the units from PSI to either of the other two? Mine will not change, just wondering if yours does. Ryobi says exchange it, just figured I would see if anyone else even tried.
I've done it many times without issue. I guess yours is defective somehow.
Yeah, I took it back and picked up a different ryobi tool. I have an air compressor so I don't feel I need it just yet.
Is this more robust than the pistol grip version?
Absolutely
Can you recalibrate the tire inflation gauge
Is it possible to use it with dinghy?
If your dinghy is soft, go see your doctor.
Cool review man :)
VintageOutboardMan Thanks! :)
I set mine to 37, hook it to my car tire, press inflate and two seconds later it shows me 135 PSI!? This works great on sports equipment but I think I got a LEMON?
You probably figured out what you did wrong by now, but for others reading this you have to make sure the air chuck is fully seated on the valve stem otherwise you will only be building pressure in the hose.
This one is is good too
My battery's flat. How do I recharge it?
+Von Driu You need to use a Ryobi charger.
You need a air -> electricity adapter
Stick the inflator hose down in one battery hole then stick hot dogs in the other holes to keep the charge from escaping.
If it took Milwaukee batteries I would buy it
buzzj89 Its a shame that all cordless tools dont use the same battery platforms (like a standard wall plug on power tools)....but, for the money...I think that they Ryobi lineup is great all the way around. Especially when you are looking at tools like this or the Airstrike Nailers.
Especially since Milwaukee and Ryobi are both owned by TTI. Hey at least you guys get the wet/dry shop vac. I would eat a live kitten to get Ryobi to make one of those, 2 if they made a hybrid one.
They make one now...Enjoy that live kitten Cheng Liu
Well how long did each time take
3:50 flat tire? What's he on about its only flat on the bottom!😄
*Please answer fast*
What battery am I supposed to use?
@@AH-sc8jt u don't have to be a fucking bitch lmaoo.
@@AH-sc8jt now go drink some tea and have some scones bloody bastard☕
4:50
Any idea as to what CFM the high pressure side of this will provide. Please refer to the following video by Matt Bernstein:ruclips.net/video/W68UsPbs1Go/видео.html. The idea is to create a portable cylinder leakage tester. I'm wondering if this inflator would have sufficient air volume to power the cylinder leakage tester. Check out the video and let me know if you think this would do a better job than the 12V model he tried out.
I wish Makita would make one of those
If you have a flat tire with a nail in it or a leaking flat also you're at nowhere at some places.You shouldn't have recommended people tries using this thing pumping it up the tire and driving their car.Don't know if you're close to a gas station or mechanic garage.Should always change it to a spare tire or call a toll truck for your safety and well being.
+Chi Chu I'll assume by your comment that you've never gotten a nail in your tire. The air doesn't instantly leak out...normally it takes days or weeks to drop down, but people don't know it until the tire pressure sensor finally goes off. 99% of the time, this would be the ideal choice.
Whatever made you notice your tire was getting low, will be the same thing that tells you if it's getting low again. Often you only need a few miles to get the vehicle to a service station or tire store, or to a safe area to change the tire (no soft shoulder nor on the interstate any longer than necessary for safety, especially late at night), or possibly you just need to drive a few miles to get to an area with cell phone coverage.
Plus, some people, especially women and the elderly, don't realize that the !@#$ last place that worked on their vehicle, put the wheels back on with an impact wrench so tight that you'll end up snapping the lug studs off trying to get the nuts loose, if you can even generate that much torque with the crappy comes-with-vehicle tire wrench.
However, despite the mess taking the tire off later, I am a fan of the "Fix A flat" products in a can instead of taking an air compressor with me everywhere. They take up less space, cost less, attempt to seal the tire and can't help but slow a leak if the tire holds air at all. Keep in mind that some people would take a $5 tire patch tool with them so if it were a screw or nail, etc, they would just pull the screw out, put the patch in, inflate the tire, and not have to do anything more to it for the life of the tire, so long as the hole isn't in the sidewall.
You guys silly? I'm just gonna send it!!!!
Do you always take your car to a repair shop after let the air out of your tire!? 🤦♂️
Definitely
Sounds Very Noisy
Lets say 35lbs like it should be. Lol
AAAAAAnd why the **** is your channel name german, when your videos are acutally english? is this a new youtube feature with auto-translate?
No clue....but yes, I assume it auto-translates.
So in other words the complete unit is $100.00 plus for a complete working charger. As this unit is worthless without the rest of the parts.
Well.....as I said in the video, this is a bare tool for $40.....the vast majority of people buying one will already have Ryobi batteries & chargers. This is exactly the same as ANY other cordless tool.
Not worthless at all, you can wrap it in fancy paper and give it to me for Christmas. ;)
Would the 5.0mah protrude bottom the bottom, as it is a slightly taller battery.