The Dynaplug Micro Racer is the lightest and smallest alloy tubeless repair tool in the company's range. The Micro bit refers to it being 10g lighter and two-thirds the length of the already-small-and-light Racer Pro tool. If you want Dynaplug functionality in a tiny, light package, look no further.
> Buy now: Dynaplug Micro Racer for £37.99 from Team Cycles
US brand Dynaplug is pretty much the undisputed king of fast, effective tubeless repair. I've used many (but admittedly not all) tubeless plug-style repair tools, and Dynaplug has repeatedly beaten all the competition with the speed of use and effectiveness of repair. Yes, they are premium tools to buy and reload – but what price getting rolling again quickly and with air still in your tyres?
Over the years we've reviewed a number of Dynaplug tools – David rated the Racer and I really liked the £24 Dynaplugger.
The plugs used in the Micro Racer are the same standard ones as in other Dynaplug tools. As with the Racer, you get a threaded, double-ended tube holding two standard plugs. In the Racer tool you get two of these, hence two endcaps and four plugs in total. In the Racer, one of the threaded insert tubes has a fatter end to hold a Dynaplug Megaplug – the larger blunt-nosed insert for larger cuts. If you already have a Racer tool, the Mega-insert holder will fit in the Micro – but you can't buy the insert tubes separately from Dynaplug.
Speaking of inserts, expect to pay around £20 for a pack of five refills. Yes, that's a decent whack – but in my view, when you're trailside in the cold and wet, if a £4 plug gets you back rolling quickly it's worth every penny and then some.
Measuring 75mm long and 12mm across and weighing just 15g, the Micro Racer is about as small and light as you can imagine a fast, effective tubeless repair solution being. It will fit into the smallest of seatpacks, bar bags or bikepacking luggage with ease, so will appeal to the weight-conscious or space-strapped alike.
At £39.99 for a tool with two inserts it's certainly the most expensive bang for your superlight/small buck in the Dynaplug range. For just £7 more you could get the Racer Pro, with an extra standard and Mega insert. Clearly, if you're going for the Micro Racer, it's because you want to shave every gram *and* millimetre off your tubeless repair solution.
The £38 Racer tool is glass-fibre-reinforced plastic rather than alloy, meaning it weighs 1g less, but it's a bit larger. It holds the same three standard inserts as the Racer Pro plus one Megaplug insert, so that's the one to go for if you are less fussed about size.
As for the Micro Racer's ability to actually plug holes – take it from me, it just works, almost all the time. If it doesn't, nothing else would have likely worked either – but then I can count the number of times Dynaplug failed me due to a cut being too large on about one finger. It takes longer to read the sentence describing the action of unscrewing, flipping, resecrewing and stabbing the second insert into a still-leaking tyre than it does to actually do it.
The competition is a plethora of variations on the fork-and-strip idea – some of them very good (and a LOT cheaper) – but the Dynaplug solution is the best I've used. In my experience with other designs, the time it takes to fish out, peel, thread and stab a strip means almost certainly your tyre is now flat, possibly popped off the bead, and you're in even more trouble than before. In the cold and wet, with gloved fingers – triple that. If you're happy with that, and want to save your pennies, there are plenty of options for a lot less money.
Stan's Dart Tool is a cheaper option at £25; I haven't used it but the reviews aren't glowing and the darts themselves are huge – meaning carrying spares is another container.
A more expensive option is WTB's £50 Rocket; it's kinda similar in that it uses a metal head to keep standard 'bacon strips' in place, but it looks to be a faff compared with the Micro Racer, and there's considerable risk of losing small parts out on the trail.
Conclusion
Overall, the Micro Racer is a worthy addition to the Dynaplug range. The only drawback is that you don't get an option to use a Megaplug insert, but if you can live with that and want the smallest tubeless tool around, it's an excellent choice.
> Buy now: Dynaplug Micro Racer for £37.99 from Team Cycles
Verdict
Pretty much the last word in ultralight, small, fast, easy tubeless repair
Make and model: Dynaplug Micro Racer tubeless bicycle tyre repair kit
Tell us what the product is for and who it's aimed at. What do the manufacturers say about it? How does that compare to your own feelings about it?
It's for extremely space- and weight-conscious tubeless riders.
Dynaplug says:
"We invented the micro plugger! Introducing the lightest and fastest option for plugging tubeless tires, the Micro Racer. Weighing a scant 15 grams, our new plugging solution is nearly half the size of the Racer Pro and the lightest aluminum tool to date. For riders looking to shave weight or maximize space, the Micro Racer is the tubeless tool of choice.
Machined in Chico California from US-made billet aluminum and stainless steel, the Micro Racer takes advantage of our Twin Tube™ technology for twice the puncture-defeating power! Thats right two plugs are ready to go in this ultra compact, micro package.
Limited Lifetime Warranty
Made in USA"
Tell us some more about the technical aspects of the product?
From Dynaplug:
Specifications
Tool Body Construction - Anodized/Non Ano Billet 6061 Aluminum
Dimensions - 2.86" x .49"
Weight - 15 grams loaded
Insertion Tube - Hardened 304 Stainless Steel
Plug Material - Viscoelastic Impregnated Rubber
Plug Tip - Nonabrasive Brass
Warranty - Limited Lifetime
Rate the product for quality of construction:
10/10
Classy CNC-machined alloy and stainless steel.
Rate the product for performance:
10/10
Rate the product for durability:
10/10
Can't imagine how you'd break this. Ever.
Rate the product for weight (if applicable)
10/10
Rate the product for comfort (if applicable)
10/10
Rate the product for value:
4/10
It's a premium product for sure, but expensive even compared with other Dynaplug options.
Tell us how the product performed overall when used for its designed purpose
Can't fault it. It works.
Tell us what you particularly liked about the product
The size.
Tell us what you particularly disliked about the product
Only the lack of a Megaplug.
How does the price compare to that of similar products in the market, including ones recently tested on road.cc?
It's expensive, no doubt – the Racer Pro is only £7 more for twice the stabbiness.
Did you enjoy using the product? Yes
Would you consider buying the product? Yes
Would you recommend the product to a friend? Yes
Use this box to explain your overall score
It's excellent, only missing out on full marks for being pricey, because Dynaplug, and the lack of a Megaplug option.
Age: 47 Height: 183cm Weight: 77kg
I usually ride: Sonder Camino Gravelaxe My best bike is: Nah bro that's it
I've been riding for: Over 20 years I ride: A few times a week I would class myself as: Expert
I regularly do the following types of riding: cyclo cross, general fitness riding, mtb, G-R-A-V-E-L
I think we are in agreement and your point is the same one I was attempting to make. There is a proliferation of these bikes as they are legal to...
The actual solution to issues/debates around PSPO's is simple....
They certainly aren't losers, they are a successful company, with a unique product and brand which they have every right to defend.
Surely the benchmark for this kind of tyre is one of the Schwable Marathon variants?...
Yes ... but it's not just "but road A can't be replaced with cycle path B". That through traffic - while maybe not just going from next to the...
Nasty. The Met may evan take action, as it was a non-cyclist ABH-ed.
Meanwhile, there's plenty of prison space for climate protestors: https://www.bristol247.com/climate/news-climate/gp-jailed-for-peaceful-climate...
They may be held up because - according to the Evening Standard - some of their electronic components are now being diverted to build drones? (No...
RE: War on motorists - Excellent! In my neck of the woods probably needs more bollards, sadly...
I generally agree (although it's obviously about a lot more than road safety - we can use that though), and I'm more critical of "we have to get...