Another of the many functional and beautiful Silca tools I have. I use this with (shock horror) a Ryobi compressor which is close enough for just maintaining air pressure in bicycle tires for bikes on the rack. It makes the job way easier than previously with other chucks. I also have a nicely refurbished Silca track pump which I've owned since the 80's. I expect it will last several lifetimes.
You might want to add the preload adjustment to the description or information included with the Hiro, I almost sent mine back because it kept slipping off one of my valves.
@@perrywall2532 Review the video and at 3:10 you'll see him mention the preload and where you adjust that, tighten it a bit like a quarter turn and try to pump your tire. If it pops off tighten some more till you get to your desired psi. Its a great chuck after trying two others which eventually failed for one reason or another.
Another of the many functional and beautiful Silca tools I have. I use this with (shock horror) a Ryobi compressor which is close enough for just maintaining air pressure in bicycle tires for bikes on the rack. It makes the job way easier than previously with other chucks. I also have a nicely refurbished Silca track pump which I've owned since the 80's. I expect it will last several lifetimes.
Please post videos more often of your products. Great explanations and detail!
Silca makes beautiful products and riders like myself absolutely love these. Thank you. Keep up the great job.
You might want to add the preload adjustment to the description or information included with the Hiro, I almost sent mine back because it kept slipping off one of my valves.
Jorge2222 Mines doing the same! It’s brand new,out of the box! Can only get 65psi! How did you fix it?
@@perrywall2532 Review the video and at 3:10 you'll see him mention the preload and where you adjust that, tighten it a bit like a quarter turn and try to pump your tire. If it pops off tighten some more till you get to your desired psi. Its a great chuck after trying two others which eventually failed for one reason or another.