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What size have you got? Biggest I've seen is 60". Are you trying to use it to get the tyre off or just lift the vehicle? If your just lifting the car then you could get one of the adaptors that lifts from your rim.
Will have to measure it when i get home.
Wanting to get tyres off.
The only other thing i thought is if i used one of those rim lifting adapters and then put axle stands under to hold the weight while i changed the tyre; problem is when your off road there isn't much level ground and the vehicle would roll off the stands
Sounds like you are using the jack incorrectly.
If you want to lift the tyre, use a strap or chain around the diff&chassis so your not just flexing the suspension and giving it more force to spring back down with when it slips
just don't get under it and chock all the wheels. more likely to fall off a highlift than a bottle jack imo as its under the axle and you aren't lifting it 2ft in the air
I use a big chinese trolley jack to change tyres, its dead easy. The jack has a very long handle, and about a 600mm throw. $150 from Autoparts. Cheap :-)
pridhac wrote:I use a big chinese trolley jack to change tyres, its dead easy. The jack has a very long handle, and about a 600mm throw. $150 from Autoparts. Cheap :-)
Already have an awesome "shed jack" low profile, high lift, double pump cylinders and long arm. Lifting on and off ute when off road......FARK THAT
shorty_f0rty wrote:
LuxyBoy wrote:
alien wrote:
buy a hydraulic jack, one of those little ones, and jack it up from the diff.
When on a hill
does this mean you'd consider using a hilift on a hill too? madness!
Yes isn't that what they are for
Should note i would also strap it to a tree or another vehicle so it doesn't drive itself to the bottom
So what do you use the the highlift for and what do you use on a hill
dansedgli wrote:My high lift has a warning sticker saying not to be used for changing tyres.
Shite
So WTF do you use the the highlift for and what do you use on a hill Sorry insanity kicking in
When i bought the damn thing i was told that this is what it was to be used for damn sales men
klrevo wrote:yeh, i just bought a 60" highlift $158, but i also bought a 4 ton bottle jack for changing tyres $28.
dean
So what do you use the the highlift for
They make your car look more "off road worthy".
They are handy, they are unstable, they don't like dust. I have one, use it quite a lot. They do become very unstable if you don't chain the diff to the chassis before lifting the car.
[quote="Harb"]Well I'm guessing that they didn't think everyone would carry on like a big bunch of sooky girls over it like they have........[/quote]
Agreed they're pretty useless except for when you can't get a bottle jack under the axle - even on flat ground they're dangerous. Still i consider them a handy bit of equipment to carry.
LuxyBoy wrote:So what do you use the the highlift for and what do you use on a hill
well id personally try and get to flat ground to change tyres, having a vehicle on a hill to change a tyre, even strapped to something secure is risky business in my books,..
you can use it as a clamp, expander, straightener of steering links (handle works good as a sleeve), push out your roof after a hard roll, winch or to lift my 40 onto jack stands in the driveway.
a high lihft is for credibility. Make sure it is mounted somewhere on the vehicle where the most people can see it, preferably on a roofrack or similar. Then everyone will know you're hardcore.
We refer to the hilift as "the deathstick" I've had my car fall off one with the wheels chocked, in the garage. I've never used one in the bush.
What are they for? anything but lifting a car off the ground. If you have to use one this way, ABSOLUTELY chain the axle to the chassis before you liftand be very very careful.
The handle is grouse though!
Steve.
[quote="greg"] some say he is a man without happy dreams, or that he sees silver linings on clouds and wonders why they are not platinum... all we know, is he's called the stevie.[/quote]
chikoroll_ wrote:....so why are they called a lift if they can't lift?
They can lift, just not a car, safely. Remember, they were designed around the turn of the century (1907 of something) as a farm tool, not as a piece of recovery equipment. I think they are missapropriated as a jack for general vehicle use.
If everyone always chained the axle to the car before lifting, it wouldn't be a problem though.
Steve.
[quote="greg"] some say he is a man without happy dreams, or that he sees silver linings on clouds and wonders why they are not platinum... all we know, is he's called the stevie.[/quote]