There is a version of kayaking that looks like the photos — glassy water, early morning light, a person serenely paddling through somewhere beautiful. I have experienced that version. I have also experienced the version that starts with twenty minutes of kneeling on a riverbank, red-faced, pumping air into an inflatable kayak with a cheap single-action pump while my paddling partner pretends not to notice.
The pump was always the worst part of the trip. I'd bought a basic one when I got my inflatable kayak two years ago, on the basis that a pump is a pump and I didn't need to spend money on something that just moves air. This was, I now understand, a mistake.
The Problem With My Old Pump
Single-action pumps only move air on one stroke — either the push or the pull, depending on the design. The other stroke is dead effort. It sounds like a minor inefficiency until you're trying to inflate a kayak to the correct pressure and you've been at it for fifteen minutes and you're already tired before you've touched the water.
The other problem was pressure. I had no idea how much air was in the kayak. The manufacturer specified a target PSI. I had no way of measuring it. I'd inflate until it felt firm, which is not a precise method, and then either over-inflate (bad for the seams) or under-inflate (bad for performance and tracking). I'd been doing this for two years and accepting it as just how inflatable kayaking worked.
Then I capsized on a flat section of river that I had absolutely no business capsizing on, and my paddling partner — diplomatically — suggested the kayak might have been a bit soft. I went home and bought a proper pump.
Why the Advanced Elements Pump
I wanted two things: double-action inflation and a built-in pressure gauge. The Advanced Elements Double Action Hand Pump with Pressure Gauge had both, plus universal valve adaptors that fit all valve types including twist-lock — which my kayak uses, and which had been a compatibility headache with other pumps I'd looked at.
The double-action design inflates on both the push and the pull stroke, which effectively doubles the air moved per cycle compared to a single-action pump. The pressure gauge reads from 0 to 15psi with a clear dial, and the pump is rated to 14.5psi — which covers the inflation requirements of virtually every inflatable kayak and paddleboard on the market. It can also deflate, which I hadn't thought about but turns out to be genuinely useful when you're packing up at the end of a trip and want to get the air out quickly.
First Use: A Saturday Morning on the Wye
We drove out to the Wye on a Saturday, got to the put-in point, and I set up the pump. The double-action was immediately, obviously better. The kayak was inflating at roughly twice the rate I was used to, with half the effort. I wasn't stopping to rest. I wasn't getting red-faced. I was just pumping, watching the gauge climb, and stopping when it hit the manufacturer's recommended pressure.
That last part — stopping at the right pressure — felt almost absurdly satisfying after two years of guessing. The kayak was properly inflated for the first time. It tracked better. It felt more responsive. Whether the capsize on the flat section had been down to under-inflation or just a bad moment, I'll never know, but the boat felt noticeably more solid and predictable on the water.
Several Trips Later
I've used it on six or seven trips now — the Wye twice, a lake in the Brecon Beacons, a couple of local river sections. The pump has been consistent every time. The gauge reads accurately, the double-action hasn't degraded, the valve adaptors have worked with every connection I've tried. It packs down small enough to fit in the kayak bag alongside the boat, which matters when you're loading a car.
The deflation function has become part of my pack-up routine. Open the valves, use the pump in reverse to pull the air out quickly, fold the kayak down. It saves five or ten minutes at the end of a trip, which is the point when you're tired and wet and just want to get home. Those minutes matter.
What I'd Tell Anyone With an Inflatable
If you have an inflatable kayak, paddleboard, or any inflatable outdoor gear and you're using a basic single-action pump without a pressure gauge, this is the upgrade that will make the most immediate difference to your experience. Not on the water — before you even get there. The setup is faster, less exhausting, and for the first time you actually know your gear is inflated correctly. That last point matters more than I'd appreciated.
The pre-trip faff was always the thing that made me slightly reluctant to go on weekday evenings after work. It's not reluctance anymore. I can have the kayak inflated and ready in under ten minutes, which changes the calculation entirely.
The Verdict
I spent two years making inflatable kayaking harder than it needed to be. This pump fixed that. It's the kind of purchase that makes you wonder why you waited.
Find it here: Advanced Elements Double Action Hand Pump with Pressure Gauge
And if you're kitting out for outdoor adventures, our Sporting Goods, Outdoor Recreation, and Camping & Hiking collections are worth exploring — as are our Air Mattress & Sleeping Pad Pumps and Air Mattress & Sleeping Pad Accessories sections for more inflation gear.
— Reuben Ashworth, Hereford
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