Tubeless Tyre Booster CO2 Inflator
Best price gurantee
48 hour delivery
Pay every 2 weeks in 4 interest-free installments
Free Delivery
Royal Mail 48 hour tracked delivery.
Or get it next day with Royal Mail 24 hour for only £1.99
Extensive Bike Range
Best Prices Guaranteed
Best price gurantee
48 hour delivery
Pay every 2 weeks in 4 interest-free installments
Free Delivery
Royal Mail 48 hour tracked delivery.
Or get it next day with Royal Mail 24 hour for only £1.99
With the new Tyre Booster from Schwalbe, tubeless tires can be fitted safely. Even without a compressor. With the power of up to 11 bar pressure. 435 g light. With the practical mounting strap, the Tire Booster can be attached directly to the floor pump. This also keeps the workshop tidy at all times. The light handy cylinder can be used both statically and on the road.
Note: Only for SV valves.
A powerful blast of air is required for tubeless tyre assembly so that the tyre bead quickly presses into the rim flange and the tyre is sealed. “Depending on the combination of tyre and rim it doesn't always work with conventional floor pumps” explains Peter Krischio Schwalbe Product Manager Race. In the professional workshop or at the garage a compressor helps out.
For safe and easy fitting without a compressor Schwalbe is now launching the Tyre Booster which was developed in collaboration with the British start-up Airshot. With it a pressure of up to eleven bar can be immediately applied in the tyres. “The tyre immediately seats itself safely on the rim and seals everything evenly” says Peter Krischio. “The Tyre Booster is a significant advantage for assembly of tubeless tyres. At a light 435 grams you can easily take it along on your trips.”
If you need an even bigger flow of air a special adapter is also available. For this the valve insert is removed and the adapter is screwed directly onto the valve spindle - the airflow is thus maximised.
And this is how it works: connect the Tyre Booster to a conventional floor pump using the SV valve on the Tire Booster fill the cylinder and then operate the quick-release valve. The air immediately distributes itself evenly and the tire seats itself - usually with the typical loud crack - firmly on the rim.