cancel
Showing results forย 
Search instead forย 
Did you mean:ย 

Sizing jack stands for wind load?

Naio
Explorer II
Explorer II
I often camp in windy places.

In my current, small van, I sometimes have to lift the tires off the ground to get stability. I use jack stands that are each rated for my whole gvw, to allow for the increased load with wind gusts. 45 mph gusts are common. (When they reached 60mph this winter I went to a motel for 2 nights, but my cat hated that. I thought my little van might blow off the jack stands!)

I guess my current ones will be ok for the front of my new van, but I will need a stronger pair for the rear.

Is gvw a good guide? Or how SHOULD I estimate wind forces and strength?

Are HF stands ok?

Thanks, always.
3/4 timing in a DIY van conversion. Backroads, mountains, boondocking, sometimes big cities for a change of pace.
12 REPLIES 12

Naio
Explorer II
Explorer II
DrewE, the van does move in the wind. It is not static. It flexes, rather than falls, so far.

The calculations for this are beyond my knowledge, but I am hoping one of the engineers here will weigh in.
3/4 timing in a DIY van conversion. Backroads, mountains, boondocking, sometimes big cities for a change of pace.

DrewE
Explorer II
Explorer II
Naio wrote:
I'm thinking it not just the weight of the rig. Force is mass times acceleration. I don't know what the acceleration is when a 60mph gust hits my van broadside, but it's -something-, and that's the bit I am thinking about.


These are pretty much textbook problems in statics. (Statics is the analysis of forces on things that are not moving, and is a basic part of mechanical engineering. The companion study of dynamics involves the analysis of forces on things that move.)

F=ma is a description of how a body reacts to the net forces on it. The word "net" is key; a force may be applied, but if counteracted by an opposing force, it doesn't cause any acceleration.

We have many, many cases where forces do not result in acceleration in everyday life, though we don't think of them as such usually. DrewE right now is sitting in a chair and has a force of about 150 pounds exerted on him by gravity. This is not causing any acceleration downward because the floor (via a chair and DrewE's feet) is exerting an opposite force of about 150 pounds upwards. If DrewE were in an elevator starting upwards, the force from the floor would be something greater than 150 pounds, and DrewE (and the elevator car and whatever else is in it) would accelerate upwards. Once the destination was reached, the force from the elevator floor would be less than 150 pounds, and DrewE would accelerate downwards, or equivalently decelerate upwards.

For your van, the basic assumption and goal is to have no acceleration, or to exactly counteract the forces of gravity and from the wind with opposite forces applied through the jack stands. If the wind force becomes great enough, the jack stands might not be able to apply an opposite force, either because it fails (and crumples) or because its base is too small for the horizontal force required (and the jack stand falls over sideways) or because the force required from one jack stand to maintain stability ends up being in the downwards direction (and the van falls over off the jack stands). We could do analyses and math and such to figure out when that would be, but suffice to say that for realistic situations your setup is OK. I'm assuming you wouldn't put yourself in the situation of being parked broadside to hurricane winds but would instead use the wheels and engine of the van to get out of Dodge.

Naio
Explorer II
Explorer II
Wow, Mex, that is amazing! I would never think the dirt would hold like that.

Probably not relevant to me, in temporary camps, but fascinating.

B. O., I never said anything about the van blowing onto its side, never thought it would. However, if it came off the jack stands while I was asleep that would kill my back. THAT is the problem.
3/4 timing in a DIY van conversion. Backroads, mountains, boondocking, sometimes big cities for a change of pace.

troubledwaters
Explorer III
Explorer III
If the wind is strong enough to blow your van off the stands that is the least of your problems.

MEXICOWANDERER
Explorer
Explorer
Will they allow you to bury two small junk car tires? Not a joke. If you can do that you can do the same thing as I have on Quicksilver. Bury tires or even 2 feet square 1-1/8" sub floor grade plywood.

Drill two holes 18" apart in the center of each. Half inch NYLON rope will hold your van.

Bury squares under 18" of dirt or sand. With sand pour water on top to compact the sand.

Sticking out of the ground will be two loops you tied into the above-ground NYLON rope.

Attach one cargo ratcheting load strap to each loop and the other end to the frame of your rig.




Keep pulling the lever ratchet-ratchet-ratchet, until the strap tightens.

https://www.harborfreight.com/catalogsearch/result/index/?dir=asc&order=EAScore%2Cf%2CEAFeatured+Wei...

Quicksilver laughed at a 150 mph broadside hurricane. It didn't even quiver.

B_O__Plenty
Explorer II
Explorer II
Overthinking this. If it falls off a stand where is it going, it will just land on the wheels. Never saw a van blown over by anything less than a tornado.

B.O.
Former Ram/Cummins owner
2015 Silverado 3500 D/A DRW
Yup I'm a fanboy!
2016 Cedar Creek 36CKTS

Naio
Explorer II
Explorer II
I'm thinking it not just the weight of the rig. Force is mass times acceleration. I don't know what the acceleration is when a 60mph gust hits my van broadside, but it's -something-, and that's the bit I am thinking about.
3/4 timing in a DIY van conversion. Backroads, mountains, boondocking, sometimes big cities for a change of pace.

DrewE
Explorer II
Explorer II
Naio wrote:
DrewE wrote:

Do bear in mind that jack stands are often sold in pairs and rated for load for the pair, with each of the stands actually rated individually for only half that weight. It's sometimes a bit misleading, with the small print taking away what the big print giveth.


Oh, dang, I did not know that!

So the 3ton stand I have are really 3000lbs each... that still might be ok for the front, where gaw is around 3000lbs? And for the back, where gaw is around 6000, are 5 ton / 5000 jacks ok?

I do know to go with steel. I was exited over the lightness and high weight rating of those screw top aluminum jack stands -- until I saw a couple break in two when a jack slipped. Not good for sudden shear forces.


You really have to look at the stands or their instructions or packaging to know for sure. Some are rated by pairs, some individually; I've seen both. I think usually if they're sold as a set of two they rate them by the pair, but if they're sold individually the rating is for the individual unit; however, I wouldn't treat that as anything more than a rule of thumb.

Realistically, so long as you have some reasonable margin over the axle weight divided by two, you should be OK. 5000 pounds is in my opinion quite sufficient for a 3000 pound load, even taking into account wind forces. If the wind is blowing enough that you have 5000 ponds on the one side and 1000 pounds on the other, you probably don't want to be anywhere near the area, particularly if there are trees or sand or what have you around. I'm assuming you aren't intending to camp on the summit of Mt Washington, for instance, where the old observatory/stage road office building is literally chained to the rock to keep it from blowing away (and where the highest recorded wind speed was observed, at 231 mph).

BFL13
Explorer II
Explorer II
Naio wrote:
I often camp in windy places.

In my current, small van, I sometimes have to lift the tires off the ground to get stability. I use jack stands that are each rated for my whole gvw, to allow for the increased load with wind gusts. 45 mph gusts are common. (When they reached 60mph this winter I went to a motel for 2 nights, but my cat hated that. I thought my little van might blow off the jack stands!)

I guess my current ones will be ok for the front of my new van, but I will need a stronger pair for the rear.

Is gvw a good guide? Or how SHOULD I estimate wind forces and strength?


Are HF stands ok?

Thanks, always.


Your problem is similar to what a ship-of-the-line had-- to keep the lower gun ports aimed at the dastardly French ship downwind of her. (The good guys--us--always had the windward gauge)

(Think camping neighbour with outside speakers, playing Hip-Hop.)

A "topsail wind" is 2 lb per sq ft, so your van will heel 7 degrees. This puts that much extra pressure on the jacks to keep it level, so your lower gun ports are not pointing at the ground next to your van, and you want to use them to add to your fire on that annoying French guy down wind in the next camp site.

So now it is all math-- how much extra weight is on the "down" vector from your van NOT heeling 7 degrees in a topsail wind? (The simple solution is left to the student.)
1. 1991 Oakland 28DB Class C
on Ford E350-460-7.5 Gas EFI
Photo in Profile
2. 1991 Bighorn 9.5ft Truck Camper on 2003 Chev 2500HD 6.0 Gas
See Profile for Electronic set-ups for 1. and 2.

Naio
Explorer II
Explorer II
DrewE wrote:
Wind isn't going to put more than the full vehicle weight on any one jack stand, since the applied force on the van is in the horizontal rather than the vertical plane. Your approach is safely conservative.

Do bear in mind that jack stands are often sold in pairs and rated for load for the pair, with each of the stands actually rated individually for only half that weight. It's sometimes a bit misleading, with the small print taking away what the big print giveth.


Oh, dang, I did not know that!

So the 3ton stand I have are really 3000lbs each... that still might be ok for the front, where gaw is around 3000lbs? And for the back, where gaw is around 6000, are 5 ton / 5000 jacks ok?

I do know to go with steel. I was exited over the lightness and high weight rating of those screw top aluminum jack stands -- until I saw a couple break in two when a jack slipped. Not good for sudden shear forces.
3/4 timing in a DIY van conversion. Backroads, mountains, boondocking, sometimes big cities for a change of pace.

DrewE
Explorer II
Explorer II
Wind isn't going to put more than the full vehicle weight on any one jack stand, since the applied force on the van is in the horizontal rather than the vertical plane. Your approach is safely conservative.

Do bear in mind that jack stands are often sold in pairs and rated for load for the pair, with each of the stands actually rated individually for only half that weight. It's sometimes a bit misleading, with the small print taking away what the big print giveth.

BarryG20
Explorer
Explorer
If each stand is rated for the full gvw then that is not going to be the issue. The only issue I can think of is the stands stability in two places. The part that is actually touching the vehicle ie will the vehicle slide /get pushed off without knocking the stand over or perhaps better said the connection between the stand and the vehicle and secondly the base of the stand or footprint. Is the footprint of the stand more than the tire it is displacing? Bottle jack perhaps not, actual jack stand probably ok. I would park nose or tail into the wind and only raise the vehicle the least amount as possible. I seriously doubt a 60mph wind is going to blow over a van but it may blow it off the stands if they are not appropriate.
2016 Jayco 28.5 RLTS