Ironbuilt
Well-Known Member
Dad?Dad, with my depth perception, I'd have a pool noodle hanging from the ceiling to protect that wing!
Is there something that I don't know about here?
Dad?Dad, with my depth perception, I'd have a pool noodle hanging from the ceiling to protect that wing!
And those lift pads slide the whole length of the lift? I really like that set-up. I might have to re-think the 2 post.Posts are 97" high! Platforms last lock gives a deck height of 84".
View attachment 1061746
LOL.. you can watch the shadow on the ceiling !! Next up I'll be cutting a rectangular box in the ceiling. I still have 9" above the car, 2" above the wing. I can just get the Bee under right now with a 1/2" to spare, but 9" would be so much nicer. Almost think I planned for this day running the trusses the long way across the shop! My ceiling is 10' 4" / 10' 5" by the way.Dad, with my depth perception, I'd have a pool noodle hanging from the ceiling to protect that wing!
It's a rolling 4500lb jack Paul. I've got it and a heavy duty jack tray that I can use a bottle jack in for now. I had ordered Two x 4500 rolling jacks on the lift I was waiting for, but maybe I don't need the other one.And those lift pads slide the whole length of the lift? I really like that set-up. I might have to re-think the 2 post.
That's really cool Wayne. So you can slide them and lift any part of the car, of the entire car? I am intrigued.It's a rolling 4500lb jack Paul. I've got it and a heavy duty jack tray that I can use a bottle jack in for now. I had ordered Two x 4500 rolling jacks on the lift I was waiting for, but maybe I don't need the other one.
View attachment 1061785 View attachment 1061787
LOL.. you can watch the shadow on the ceiling !! Next up I'll be cutting a rectangular box in the ceiling. I still have 9" above the car, 2" above the wing. I can just get the Bee under right now with a 1/2" to spare, but 9" would be so much nicer. Almost think I planned for this day running the trusses the long way across the shop! My ceiling is 10' 4" / 10' 5" by the way.
It's a rolling 4500lb jack Paul. I've got it and a heavy duty jack tray that I can use a bottle jack in for now. I had ordered Two x 4500 rolling jacks on the lift I was waiting for, but maybe I don't need the other one.
View attachment 1061785 View attachment 1061787
Even if it's a reputable brand that's made in China I still question them to an extent. Shipping and packaging becomes a priority, it seams like products start being produced in a manner that allows more parts to be bundled in smaller packages? I've noticed a huge difference in mass between mine and Chinese lifts, I've got 16" wide beams and 24" mounting pads.The China vs US made can be misleading. Even "US made" can include components manufactured in China. First lift was from an outfit in Texas, branded a Triumph. Did not have equalization cables, used a flow equalizer to keep the arms in sync. Worked for awhile, but eventually one arm started lagging the other. Contacted the company, they had to send my info to their "technicians" in China. Answer was always the same, add an external flow control, which is BS. That lift went to the steel recycler.
Next time around, went with an Atlas 8K. Couple local repair shops use them. As some have mentioned, the foundation is a key element. Had a standard garage pad, 3.5-4", likely 3000psi strength. Excavated a 3' x 3' section, 18" deep, for each post. Undercut the slab, and installed a rebar cage. Poured 4000psi concrete. Let it cure 45days. Drilled 1" holes for Wej-it Power Sert 3/4" epoxy anchors. The lift came with mechanical wedge anchors. Done correctly the epoxy anchors have much stronger pullout specs against a dynamic load. I personally wouldn't use wedge anchors as it's too easy (for me) to drill an oversize/bad hole which could compromise the wedge strength. Very happy with the Atlas.
Something to consider, if your lift doesn't have it, add a safety switch ahead of the lift pushbutton. They are cheap insurance against a stuck pushbutton.
View attachment 1060658