Zgzuxo portable tire inflator review: This may be my favorite car accessory of 2024
Compact, powerful and versatile, this little gadget is a must-have for home or travel.
If you know me personally, please stop reading right now — because I'm gifting this product to you on the next suitable occasion (birthday, holiday, etc.) and don't want to spoil the surprise. The Zgzuxo Tire Inflator is not only one of the coolest and most practical products I've tried in recent memory, it's also a killer gift item. On sale now for $33 (regularly priced at around $55), you get a compact, powerful air compressor that's also a flashlight and mobile charger. Save for one or two minor quibbles, it's darn near perfect. Here's my Zgzuxo Tire Inflator review.
VERDICT: This cool, compact, affordable air compressor is small enough to fit in a glove compartment but powerful enough to inflate truck tires, car tires, bicycle tires and playground balls. It also doubles as a backup charger for your phone. What's not to like?
- Compact and lightweight
- Easy to use
- Suitable for everything from balls to bikes to car tires
- Doubles as a flashlight, triples as a power bank
- Includes drawstring carrying case
- Screen can be difficult to see in daylight
- Connector sometimes jiggles loose
This handsome little monolith is black with orange accents. It weighs about 1.3 pounds and can easily fit in a glove compartment, backpack or the like. A drawstring carrying case keeps everything together.
The device runs on a 7,800-mAh rechargeable battery that Zgzuxo says can fully inflate up to four car tires. To recharge it, you'll need to plug the included USB cord into a not-included USB AC adapter, one with a Type-A port.
Using this thing is a snap: You just connect the little hose, turn on the power, choose your mode and desired PSI, then press a button to start inflating. Feel free to do something else while it's running, because it'll automatically stop once it hits the set PSI. (That's a huge plus, and one reason I prefer this to inflators with gauges you have to monitor manually.)
I especially like the large, easy-to-read display that shows your selected mode (car, bike, motorcycle, ball or custom), desired PSI setting (up to 150) and current PSI of whatever the inflator is connected to. A longer button-press toggles between PSI, BAR, KPA and Kg/cm2 modes as well.
I tested this first with a pair of e-bike tires that needed to be inflated to 20 PSI. One was already at 16.5; it took all of about 10 seconds to get it topped off. The other one started at 10 PSI; the compressor fully inflated it in maybe 30 seconds — impressive given how small this thing is.
Car tires are a different story, of course, as they're considerably larger. It's hard to say how long it would take to fully inflate a flat or nearly flat tube. Anecdotally, I tried it with a tire that needed to go from 32 to 36 PSI and the job took almost two minutes exactly.
In addition to a needle attachment for inflating basketballs and the like, the inflator comes with a couple different plastic air nozzles (presumably for small inflatables such as beach balls) as well as a Presta valve. It's also designed to help out in emergencies: There's a small but reasonably bright LED flashlight you can toggle on for working in the dark, and it has a red SOS mode as well. And if your phone needs charging, just plug it into either the USB Type-A or USB-C port; the CZK-3691 doubles as a power bank.
Is there anything here I don't like? It's a little noisy, but all tire inflators are. The screen is a little hard to make out under direct sun, but that's fairly common as well.
Mostly I'm enamored with the stylish looks, compact design, useful features and affordable price. (This originally listed around $80, now sells regularly for $55 and is on sale now for $33.) At a minimum, you should definitely "gift" one to yourself.