second that Steve. I've the clarkes one from machine mart, 3ton, hilift, and it twists badly, and sinks slowly - not impressed really, but cheap (£40), so you gets what you pay for.
Al
This is the cheap thin one, the £65 one is built like a tank, see below
Click image to enlarge
"I know that you believe that you understood what you think I said, but I am not sure you realize that what you read is not what I meant"
26th Mar 2008 9:52 pm
iconix
Member Since: 19 Nov 2006
Location: Oakley, Hampshire
Posts: 938
Just bought this SIP 3 ton one on eBay for £45 & £15 P&P. Very heavy, but has a solid rubber mounting pad - anyone know how good these are?
26th Mar 2008 10:25 pm
10forcash
Member Since: 09 Jun 2005
Location: Ubique
Posts: 16534
for info, LR workshops use a minimum of a 4 tonne trolley jack with a large heavy base, not just for capacity but mainly for stability, trolley jacks are great on a hard, flat, level surface and can be dangerous on anything else...
TBH, for lifting something as expensive to fix as a D3, i'd be happy to put a zero on the end of the prices above
I wouldn't disagree with you 10, but it is a cost, I know it safety.
I used mine on a brick paved drive and support with axles stands (not easy on a D3) jacking up on the wishbones. I will probably injure myself now, but so far it has been very stable.
"I know that you believe that you understood what you think I said, but I am not sure you realize that what you read is not what I meant"
26th Mar 2008 10:58 pm
10forcash
Member Since: 09 Jun 2005
Location: Ubique
Posts: 16534
Jacking on the wishbones is possibly the most unstable place to do it! there are no flat or level load bearing surfaces... I know it's a measured risk but is it worth an injury to yourself or your wallet ? you only need it to go wrong once
The bottle jack I use to jack on the chassis rails has a max height of 515mm and a rating of 5 tonnes, not currently got a trolley jack but if I did, it'd be this one http://www.tooled-up.com/Product.asp?PID=28618
26th Mar 2008 11:07 pm
10forcash
Member Since: 09 Jun 2005
Location: Ubique
Posts: 16534
sidney wrote:
Just out of interest, what is the maximum inflated height of a Takla air jack? anyone?
about a metre! chock the wheels on the other side though
Jonathan - the sealey one looks very similar (colour apart) to the Clarke 3T Quick-lift. Very pleased with mine, but now somewhat out-gunned by TFC suggestion "To finish first, one first has to finish ...."
26th Mar 2008 11:45 pm
captain_sugar
Member Since: 05 Sep 2006
Location: Hradec Kralove
Posts: 1095
10forcash wrote:
Jacking on the wishbones is possibly the most unstable place to do it! there are no flat or level load bearing surfaces... I know it's a measured risk but is it worth an injury to yourself or your wallet ? you only need it to go wrong once
The bottle jack I use to jack on the chassis rails has a max height of 515mm and a rating of 5 tonnes, not currently got a trolley jack but if I did, it'd be this one http://www.tooled-up.com/Product.asp?PID=28618
With the car going up at one side only, so not straight up but with a radius, and moving slightly to the front or back, I would not trust jacking the car up half a meter with a bottle jack from the jacking points.
BEWARE: 39kg of weight!Some people get by
With a little understanding
Some people get by
With a whole lot more
I don�t know
Why you gotta be so undemanding
Last edited by captain_sugar on 28th Mar 2008 2:48 pm. Edited 1 time in total
27th Mar 2008 10:45 am
ronp
Member Since: 29 Nov 2006
Location: North Yorkshire
Posts: 15260
I'm selling mine!!
As new, used only for one wheel change [wheels off and wheels on], still got box.
Machine Mart £65, mine £45.
Will raise a For Sale thread on this later, if no immediate takers.
This is the £65 one is built like a tank, see below
Click image to enlarge
...... always on the road less travelled 🚧
27th Mar 2008 11:39 am
CFB
Member Since: 02 Dec 2005
Location: Bradford, West Yorkshire
Posts: 6100
captain_sugar wrote:
Isnt there a concave spot in the wishbones?
There is indeed, it seats the top of my 4T bottle jack just fine and is the most stable method I have found so far. Once jacked I pop an axle stand under the chassis rail just in case. All works well.
I rarely need to do this but if it was a regular thing I would invest in something better TBH.2020 BMW X1 18d XDrive X-Line Auto
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