โAug-03-2022 01:17 PM
โAug-15-2022 09:44 PM
ford truck guy wrote:
Quote - "
Glad my kids won't be asking how to change a tire when they get older"
My 2 daughters were NOT allowed to drive until they :
1-could pay for the car, fuel, insurance
2- show me they could change a tire alone
โAug-06-2022 02:33 PM
โAug-06-2022 08:02 AM
Gdetrailer wrote:
I have been using a 3.5 ton floor jack for well over 30 yrs on a concrete floor to lift my pickup trucks. I have not once ever seen the wheels on that jack or trucks move even 1mm..
That floor jack I have also has a contact point which looks like a castle and is 5" in diameter. Never had it offer to slide on that contact point either.
I think you have a piece of junk floor jack if it moves that much distance, you need better floor jacks.
Not ALL floor jacks have a large arc swing, junky cheapos and 50 yr old ones perhaps but not all.
Floor jacks and even smaller cousin the trolley jack both have a large base foot print over a much greater area making them by far more stable and less likely to tip over provided you only use the absolute minimum lift needed.
โAug-06-2022 05:36 AM
Gdetrailer wrote:
....
If you jack directly under the axle you would only need to lift the tire about 1".
Now if you had a flat, my tire sidewalls are about 6".
Basically to change a tire you only need the jack to lift 6".
I measured my jack at 12" (6" min height + 6" lift).
The result?
the contact plate was now 3 5/8"..
The difference, 1/8"..
....
โAug-05-2022 02:23 PM
Gdetrailer wrote:
Now my floor jack tops at 18" lift and at that top the plate moves back about 2".. At that height would be stupid to consider to be usable.
But one could say the exact same for using any jack once you get past a couple of inches worth of lift, they all get unstable. Bottle jacks, scissor jacks since they have very small base foot prints get scary unstable the higher amount of lift you go.
If one ever needed full lift height offered by a floor jack, one might wish to rethink the approach which reduces the amount of lift required..
โAug-05-2022 02:17 PM
JRscooby wrote:
I don't know where you guys get the magic floor jacks that don't move. Just for snots and grins I just put a tape on 1 of mine (standard 7000 lb capacity that I load if I know I'm going to need a jack, or grab if I need to lift a car in the drive) I put the wheels against the wall and measured to center of pad. 5 inches. Jacked to top, 13 inches.
โAug-05-2022 12:56 PM
JRscooby wrote:B-n-B wrote:
Actually it has a swivel saddle with a "scissored" lift arm and doesn't roll. Or, if it did I didn't notice enough to matter. I have actually used this jack twice without issue, so I'm not speaking hypothetically about its effectiveness. Once in a parking lot (on my car hauler) and once in sand (on my camper) at the CG. The 1x6 worked like a charm with the jack in the sand.
I don't know how I lived to tell about it.Gdetrailer wrote:
Thin board UNDER the floor or trolley jack just like you SHOULD use under ANY jack solves your objection.
Was taught many yrs ago to never use any jack directly on ground as that ground can give way unevenly resulting in the jack tipping over.
Something else to consider, with a floor or trolley jack, the arc is small, maybe 1/4" inch in total travel for the entire lift. The vehicle also moves with that arc, your assuming the vehicle stays put and never moves which is not true. Trailers and vehicles are on wheels, the brakes, drive line have slop in them which allows the vehicle to move back and forth.
I don't know where you guys get the magic floor jacks that don't move. Just for snots and grins I just put a tape on 1 of mine (standard 7000 lb capacity that I load if I know I'm going to need a jack, or grab if I need to lift a car in the drive) I put the wheels against the wall and measured to center of pad. 5 inches. Jacked to top, 13 inches.
Junking cars around others junking cars, I have seen more than 1 slip off the jack because the little steel wheels would not roll on soft wood, or because the jack rolled off the end of the board.
โAug-05-2022 12:24 PM
B-n-B wrote:
Actually it has a swivel saddle with a "scissored" lift arm and doesn't roll. Or, if it did I didn't notice enough to matter. I have actually used this jack twice without issue, so I'm not speaking hypothetically about its effectiveness. Once in a parking lot (on my car hauler) and once in sand (on my camper) at the CG. The 1x6 worked like a charm with the jack in the sand.
I don't know how I lived to tell about it.
Gdetrailer wrote:
Thin board UNDER the floor or trolley jack just like you SHOULD use under ANY jack solves your objection.
Was taught many yrs ago to never use any jack directly on ground as that ground can give way unevenly resulting in the jack tipping over.
Something else to consider, with a floor or trolley jack, the arc is small, maybe 1/4" inch in total travel for the entire lift. The vehicle also moves with that arc, your assuming the vehicle stays put and never moves which is not true. Trailers and vehicles are on wheels, the brakes, drive line have slop in them which allows the vehicle to move back and forth.
โAug-05-2022 09:19 AM
JRscooby wrote:B-n-B wrote:
This exact jack would not get under a flat tire on my trailer, at least not under the spring perch. I carry a small floor jack with a 1x6 if needed.
Do you also carry the important part needed to safely use that jack? By that I mean a floor.
With no load on it, run the jack up. Notice the lift pad goes up in a arc? Normal lifting, the pad stays in contact with lifting point be cause the jack rolls under the load. If the wheels are setting on soft or rough surface the pad must slide on you lift point. At least you're not under when it drops.
โAug-05-2022 08:19 AM
โAug-05-2022 06:24 AM
JRscooby wrote:B-n-B wrote:
This exact jack would not get under a flat tire on my trailer, at least not under the spring perch. I carry a small floor jack with a 1x6 if needed.
Do you also carry the important part needed to safely use that jack? By that I mean a floor.
With no load on it, run the jack up. Notice the lift pad goes up in a arc? Normal lifting, the pad stays in contact with lifting point be cause the jack rolls under the load. If the wheels are setting on soft or rough surface the pad must slide on you lift point. At least you're not under when it drops.
โAug-05-2022 05:18 AM
โAug-05-2022 04:22 AM
โAug-05-2022 04:12 AM
โAug-05-2022 03:51 AM
B-n-B wrote:
This exact jack would not get under a flat tire on my trailer, at least not under the spring perch. I carry a small floor jack with a 1x6 if needed.