ExNotes Product Review: GSPSCN 12-Volt Tire Inflator

By Joe Gresh

Everyone has their kink. It may be guns, it may be watches, it may be old two-stroke motorcycles. I have a sweet spot for tire inflators. I must have 10 of the things, some are big and run off 240volt AC, some are so tiny they would fit inside a pack of cigarettes (if you smoked large cigarettes). Each inflator serves a specific need for me called “feeding my ego.”

13 minutes from flat to driving. That’s fast for these type of pumps.

My latest inflator, the GSPSCN, is a real beast. Sporting dual heads (I wonder if one might be a dummy head?) this little unit moves some air. Connected to a car battery, the GSPSCN can inflate a giant tractor tire from zero to 20 psi in 13 minutes 6 seconds. And that’s not the impressive part.  The impressive part is the pump stays cool over that long stretch. All, and I mean all, of my other 12-volt inflators get hot as hell filling up a standard car tire.

a nice, tidy little unit that moves lots of air.

Until the GSPSCN I figured that heating up was the nature of small compressors. I haven’t dismantled the pump because I don’t want to break anything but I suspect there are diaphragms instead of pistons used in the two, shallow-finned cylinders.

I’ve filled this tire dozens of times and the pump has not even gotten warm. The hose is a different matter.

I’ve used the GSPSCN a bunch because the tractor has a not-so-slow leak in the left rear tire. Overnight it leaks down to zero, only the stiffness of the sidewall keeps the tractor sitting somewhat level.

A more useless gauge I’ve never seen. I’ll index it one day when I run out of things to do.

Of course this wouldn’t be an ExNotes review if we didn’t find something to complain about. The biggest issue is the pressure gauge. The thing is way, way off: like 9-10 psi. It’s useless as delivered. That means you have to have a regular tire gauge to know the tire pressure. It’s a small thing but annoying. Now I need two tools to fill a tire. One day I’ll sit down and mark the dial with a few numbers: 20-30-40-50 psi. Why didn’t the manufacturer do that for me?

The power cord could be 5-6 feet longer. I can reach from the battery to all the tires on a Jeep but Jeeps are short. If you have a car, it would be OK. If you drive one of those big-ass, compensation trucks you’ll come up short yet again. The pump came with a coiled hose extension, but I would rather have a longer cord. Again, the extension is another thing to carry.

The air chuck is a screw type, like all these small compressors I would prefer a 90-degree quick connect style. On a motorcycle with two big disc brakes, it’s hard to get your hand in there to screw on the chuck.

Despite the above listed flaws. the GSP has become the pump I grab first for cars, trucks and tractors. The thing runs so cool I suspect it will last a while, unlike the hot ones that fail filling one tractor tire.

I give the GSP a 4-star rating. If the gauge worked, I’d bump it to 5-stars. Go to Amazon and search the brand name if you’d like one.


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6 thoughts on “ExNotes Product Review: GSPSCN 12-Volt Tire Inflator”

  1. Best line in the piece: “If you drive one of those big-ass, compensation trucks you’ll come up short yet again.”

  2. why don’t you pump a couple gallons of stop leak into the tractor tire? inquiring minds want to know

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