Trolley Jack Beams

Trolley Jack Beams

Author
Discussion

kambites

68,450 posts

228 months

Thursday 8th October 2015
quotequote all
It's no more wobbly than a jack under a single central jacking point (like jacking the rear of a car on the diff casing). As long as you don't try and use them on both ends at once it should be fine. hehe

PositronicRay

27,535 posts

190 months

Thursday 8th October 2015
quotequote all
Looks useful, the downside would be once it's in place, clearing any under car ancillaries. You still have to have enough space to fit a jack under it.

steveo3002

10,669 posts

181 months

Thursday 8th October 2015
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cant think of many cars it would slide under , cant get a standard jack under alot of them

kambites

68,450 posts

228 months

Friday 9th October 2015
quotequote all
A pair of ramps is probably an easier solution unless you intend to work on the suspension.

steveo3002

10,669 posts

181 months

Friday 9th October 2015
quotequote all
think id spend the money on a extra jack rather than that

Mr2Mike

20,143 posts

262 months

Sunday 11th October 2015
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WhatIsIt said:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B004D44TPG/ref=pd_lpo_s...

Are they any good? (this is mostly a laziness-based idea, but would also mean I could put the jack further under the car without the need to leave room for a trolley jack handle to swing up and down)
The review stating the screw shaft broke on first use would put me off that particular model. That should simply never happen.

Scissors jacks in general are very useful however. I have a couple of them to help with various jobs (e.g. raising my car enough to get my trolley jack underneath!).

sospan

2,594 posts

229 months

Tuesday 13th October 2015
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I have made a beam for jacking up the rear of my Morgan. It is a light car so less load. There is SLIGHT deflection only as the angle adds to the stiffness.
Based on one that a Morgan owning engineer designed/made and been using for some time.
It is 30mm hardwood with steel angle along it for added strength.
Buffers on ends where it meets the chassis.
Centre marked for even lift.
ALWAYS use axle stands though and never leave it in place once the car is on stands.



4737 Carlin

1,195 posts

242 months

Sunday 18th October 2015
quotequote all
sospan said:
I have made a beam for jacking up the rear of my Morgan. It is a light car so less load. There is SLIGHT deflection only as the angle adds to the stiffness.
Based on one that a Morgan owning engineer designed/made and been using for some time.
It is 30mm hardwood with steel angle along it for added strength.
Buffers on ends where it meets the chassis.
Centre marked for even lift.
ALWAYS use axle stands though and never leave it in place once the car is on stands.
How very Morgan! clap