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Ignoramus23641 Ignoramus23641 is offline
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Default Working under a jacked vehicle

On 2011-07-14, Ed Huntress wrote:

"Jon Anderson" wrote in message
...
On 7/13/2011 2:11 PM, Ed Huntress wrote:

If you're going to work under cars and trucks, you really want some
broad-base, really solid standing jacks. They're a lifetime investment.
Mine
are 45 years old.


Some 25 years ago, I was out riding my motorcycle, and decided to stop by
a friend's house that I was passing by. He was sitting on the ground next
to his car, which had the right front wheel off, and the body just behind
the wheel well was resting directly on the wheel.
My first impression was that he was using that as a stand. Heh, nice and
stable!
But then I saw the look in his eyes and noticed some minor cuts and
scratches on his face. He'd been under the car while it was supported
solely by a jack. What type I don't recall. Anyway, wrenching a bolt
loose, the jack shifted and the car fell on him. The only reason I came by
to hear the tale, and not find him dead under his car, was the tire, and
he freely admitted it just happened to get shoved under the body, that
wasn't a safety backup.

I'm always very very cautious about working under any vehicle that's on
supports/stands. I've got a pair my grandfather made in the 40's, 12"
square base, they'd hold the front end of anything I'd ever own with no
worries. But few modern stands have a wide base for me.

Iggy's jack, I wouldn't trust even with my ex under the car...


Jon


Yes, the base on most consumer-grade jacks is not up to the job. It gives me
the creeps just to look at them and imagine someone coming up and leaning on
a fender while I'm underneath...


I think that I got it. Thanks guys.

i