The RYOBI 18V ONE+ Dual Function Digital Inflator is ideal for a variety of applications ranging from filling tires/sports balls to inflation and deflation of air mattresses and pool toys. The high pressure inflation of up to 160 PSI and high volume inflation up to 16 SCFM ensure quicker and more efficient inflation. With 280 Lumens and up to 22 hours of runtime, you'll never be left in the dark. This LED Light has over 500 feet of beam distance to illuminate whatever area you're working in. It also features a 130° pivoting head for adjustable beam direction. Best of all, it is part of the RYOBI ONE+ System - Any 18V ONE+ Battery Works With Any 18V ONE+ Product. This 18V ONE+ Dual Function Digital Inflator/Deflator is backed by the RYOBI 3-Year Manufacturer's Warranty and includes PCL031 18V ONE+ Dual Function Digital Inflator/Deflator, Sports Needle, Presta Valve Adaptor, Pinch Valve Adaptor, and 18V ONE+ Cordless LED Light. Battery and charger sold separately.
Product SKU:
328406506_328406506
UPC:
33287232840
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Model: ONE+ 18V Cordless Dual Function Inflator/Deflator with Cordless LED Light (Tools Only)
Deal History
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Sale Price does not include sale prices at Amazon unless a deal was posted by a community member.
Some of Ryobi's combos are so weird. Inflating pool toys in the dark? Topping off tire pressure at 2AM?
That being said, these auto off inflaters are awesome, I almost never touch my normal compressor (unless I'm using a nailer) since buying one.
i take this inflator camping for air matresses, and it work great, and the flashlight having the battery as a base to stand on also makes for a great camping light. both also get regular use when not camping for general bike/car tire air check(built in pressure read) and top off and general night time yard checks.
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Needing some light while working on a roadside flat at night is completely out of the realm of possibilities 🤔
You aren't likely to be repairing a flat with this combo of items. Like I said, "topping off" pressure. Otherwise you'd just use one or the other, the combo seems mismatched.
i take this inflator camping for air matresses, and it work great, and the flashlight having the battery as a base to stand on also makes for a great camping light. both also get regular use when not camping for general bike/car tire air check(built in pressure read) and top off and general night time yard checks.
I guess camping but I can't imagine needing inflate a beach ball after hours, or are you planning on riding your mountain bike in the dark with the Ryobi light duct taped to the handle bars?
Maybe an air mattress however if you planned to camp with just 18V Ryobi tools you'll be out of power pretty quickly if one of those batteries is dedicated to a flashlight or you plan on running your car for long periods to top them off (assuming you even had that accessory). And if you are on a campsite with 120v power, again, better options for one or the other, depending on use case. (My entire point)
*Again, I'm not complaining about either tool, I just can't imagine needing both of these at the same time unless they were you only owned options in either category. But if so, you aren't likely the type who is rolling around with multiple 18V batteries full at any given time if you don't have a (much better) $5 flashlight at your disposable. I have 3-4 Ryobi lights and they aren't good..just better than nothing. Not even going to waste the weight bringing either to the side of the road or a camp site.
TLDR: you do you.
Last edited by WooHoo2You April 22, 2026 at 11:11 AM.
You aren't likely to be repairing a flat with this combo of items. Like I said, "topping off" pressure. Otherwise you'd just use one or the other, the combo seems mismatched.
You have never had a tire slowly leak enough for the low-pressure warning to come while driving? This inflater would be very hand to fill in an emergency. And believe it or not, I have needed a flashlight in my car at night.
More importantly, why do the tools included in a kit need to things that must be used in conjunction with one another? It is just two useful accessory tools, package together.
You have never had a tire slowly leak enough for the low-pressure warning to come while driving? This inflater would be very hand to fill in an emergency. And believe it or not, I have needed a flashlight in my car at night.
More importantly, why do the tools included in a kit need to things that must be used in conjunction with one another? It is just two useful accessory tools, package together.
No, not 'slowly' enough to suddenly pull off the side of the road. The light isn't telling to to stop in the middle of the highway at night. Either it is just slightly low, thus can wait until you get around to making it home / a gas station with compressor / etc or catastrophic enough that adding 2PSI ain't going to help. If fast enough to warrant pulling off on a dangerous roadside, you should discontinue your journey before you have a blowout or do more damage to the tire (leading to an unrepairable leak). And no, in that circumstance I likely wouldn't been rolling around with full charged 18V tool batteries unless I worked in some kind of construction field and if I did, the tools likely wouldn't be Ryobi. Seriously do you have a bunch of Ryobi tools and charged batteries in your car? (We know you don't)
Same thing regarding the flashlight and 18V batteries. This is a (comparatively) massive setup compared to a cheapo flashlight, the cheapo flashlight is going to be far brighter, less $$, much more compact, and hold a charge far longer than something meant for a power tool...which is a completely different type of power draw for a completely different type of tool (thus likely why they aren't the greatest flashlights).
And why would a combo kit of unlikely combos be combo'd together???? LOL...that's my question. Imagine if a Happy Meal came with snow boots.
TLDR: If you want to roll around with every Ryobi tool you own and a battery or 5....you do you. Personally I think you'd be better off with a 12v cigarette lighter compressor and a $5 flashlight (with disposable batteries). Cheaper, better for your pretend use case, more compact, and will likely work regardless if you remembered to charge your ryobi batteries this month.
Last edited by WooHoo2You April 23, 2026 at 05:30 AM.
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That being said, these auto off inflaters are awesome, I almost never touch my normal compressor (unless I'm using a nailer) since buying one.
That being said, these auto off inflaters are awesome, I almost never touch my normal compressor (unless I'm using a nailer) since buying one.
That being said, these auto off inflaters are awesome, I almost never touch my normal compressor (unless I'm using a nailer) since buying one.
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Maybe an air mattress however if you planned to camp with just 18V Ryobi tools you'll be out of power pretty quickly if one of those batteries is dedicated to a flashlight or you plan on running your car for long periods to top them off (assuming you even had that accessory). And if you are on a campsite with 120v power, again, better options for one or the other, depending on use case. (My entire point)
*Again, I'm not complaining about either tool, I just can't imagine needing both of these at the same time unless they were you only owned options in either category. But if so, you aren't likely the type who is rolling around with multiple 18V batteries full at any given time if you don't have a (much better) $5 flashlight at your disposable. I have 3-4 Ryobi lights and they aren't good..just better than nothing. Not even going to waste the weight bringing either to the side of the road or a camp site.
TLDR: you do you.
More importantly, why do the tools included in a kit need to things that must be used in conjunction with one another? It is just two useful accessory tools, package together.
More importantly, why do the tools included in a kit need to things that must be used in conjunction with one another? It is just two useful accessory tools, package together.
Same thing regarding the flashlight and 18V batteries. This is a (comparatively) massive setup compared to a cheapo flashlight, the cheapo flashlight is going to be far brighter, less $$, much more compact, and hold a charge far longer than something meant for a power tool...which is a completely different type of power draw for a completely different type of tool (thus likely why they aren't the greatest flashlights).
And why would a combo kit of unlikely combos be combo'd together???? LOL...that's my question. Imagine if a Happy Meal came with snow boots.
TLDR: If you want to roll around with every Ryobi tool you own and a battery or 5....you do you. Personally I think you'd be better off with a 12v cigarette lighter compressor and a $5 flashlight (with disposable batteries). Cheaper, better for your pretend use case, more compact, and will likely work regardless if you remembered to charge your ryobi batteries this month.
Join The Conversation
Share information with the community. Please follow our Community Guidelines and be kind!