Errr...not sure, yet. I have tried pako itself, which this one uses, too, except it inflates it to 200% in size, haha. Not sure what sort of conveniences are added to justify the weight, but I will have a look. I believe, my main problem is that I just don't have full command yet over javascript. There are things I don't quite know yet, which make me stumble a little when it comes to turning Float32Array into an ArrayBuffer that the zipper then compresses, later decompress and back to Float32Array. I feel that it is ridiculously easy and should not be a problem, but there must be this one little thing I'm missing. It's like I have it already, but am overlooking one piece of understanding.
I checked superficially the contents it creates and they look perfectly fine.
Sometimes there are several problems at the same time and I may be trying to fix a hole in one pipe, not realizing that I've fixed it already, while a whole other pipe was wide open. Than I decide to abandon the pipe I fixed, find the other one and close it and all works again acceptably. If only now I would go back to the fixed pipe and put it back in place. But experience then tells me, that as long as I don't know what I'm doing, I will simply spiral back down into an endless fixing hell. Thus I must first gather more information, get smarter, so to say.
Programming... I love it and it seems to hate me sometimes.

zip solutions I've looked at:
• pako
• uzip
• snappyjs
• lz-string