Home > Wheels & Tyres > LandRover jacks are dangerous and completely useless !! |
|
|
Alistair Member Since: 11 Feb 2011 Location: Peterborough / Bordeaux / Andorra Posts: 7926 |
You can still get the exhaust jacks - not cheap though @ £90 and also not very precise - they are quite large, so spread the load over a wide area - which might be a good thing on an old Defender with a clear chassis, but I'd worry a bit about using one under a FFRR |
||
10th Feb 2016 12:22pm |
|
miggit Member Since: 12 Jul 2014 Location: Milton Keynes Posts: 3657 |
Do you mean one of these?
|
||
10th Feb 2016 10:53pm |
|
Robgosty Member Since: 20 Dec 2013 Location: Manchester Posts: 232 |
Easiest way is Merc bottle jack, grind a bit off the horns (1/16/off each end is plenty) and refit on top of jack with horns pointing down, simples |
||
12th Feb 2016 1:52pm |
|
miggit Member Since: 12 Jul 2014 Location: Milton Keynes Posts: 3657 |
The Air bag has the potential to be the best option for soft ground, as it has a much larger foot print than the more conventional types of jack, but if you read the blurb, they do say not to remove any of the wheels when your using it........ so it's not a jack........ it's a self recovery lift, and I would imagine prone to failure
|
||
13th Feb 2016 12:06pm |
|
miggit Member Since: 12 Jul 2014 Location: Milton Keynes Posts: 3657 |
Are well this is where you are wrong Buddy, the 2 stage bottle jack that's supplied in the Mercedes Sprinter will lift the wheels off the ground using the stock jacking points......
|
||
16th Feb 2016 1:41pm |
|
horse86 Member Since: 09 Dec 2014 Location: PA Posts: 860 |
Yea the "sizzor" jack was the OEM one I was referring to. It goes up nice and high but its fragile.
|
||
16th Feb 2016 1:56pm |
|
miggit Member Since: 12 Jul 2014 Location: Milton Keynes Posts: 3657 |
The Sprinter Jack can be made to fit....... You can either replace the forked top with a rectangular bar, or take an angle grinder to the ears to make it a bit smaller and then flip it over on the ram so that it's flatter Yesterday I couldn't spell Engineer... Today I are one!
|
||
16th Feb 2016 2:01pm |
|
miggit Member Since: 12 Jul 2014 Location: Milton Keynes Posts: 3657 |
This will do the job and will be a lot cheaper than a Sprinter jack
|
||
16th Feb 2016 2:10pm |
|
horse86 Member Since: 09 Dec 2014 Location: PA Posts: 860 |
And it fits under the side steps? It looks pretty tall? I see what you mean about filing off the ears on each side to fit...not picturing what you mean by flipping it over though.
|
||
16th Feb 2016 2:11pm |
|
miggit Member Since: 12 Jul 2014 Location: Milton Keynes Posts: 3657 |
the cow horns are held on with a roll pin, which you can knock out to remove the top I haven't done it myself, just relaying what someone else has done...... Yesterday I couldn't spell Engineer... Today I are one!
|
||
16th Feb 2016 2:32pm |
|
horse86 Member Since: 09 Dec 2014 Location: PA Posts: 860 |
ahh ok...good to know 2014 FF Autobiography 5.0 SC
|
||
16th Feb 2016 3:14pm |
|
johnboyairey Member Since: 11 Jan 2013 Location: surrey Posts: 2032 |
Go to eBay, look for a bmw jack pad adaptor. They are made of hard rubber, use it on your trolley jack. Then get a sprinter jack, and use the pad to model yourself a smaller metal bar to fit the top of the sprinter jack.... You need to bore it a little underneath to set the ram in, then slide the roll pin in, and you have a safe and efficient jack. |
||
19th Feb 2016 11:41pm |
|
p38arover Member Since: 16 Dec 2015 Location: Western Sydney Posts: 1526 |
I've got one. Maybe I should try it. Ron B. VK2OTC 2003 L322 V8 Auto 2007 Yamaha XJR1300 Previous: 1983, 1986 RRC; 1995, 1996 P38A; 1995 Disco1; 1984 V8 County 110; Series IIA |
||
19th Feb 2016 11:52pm |
|
miggit Member Since: 12 Jul 2014 Location: Milton Keynes Posts: 3657 |
Well it's always good to try something before you need to use it..... especially if it doesn't work Yesterday I couldn't spell Engineer... Today I are one!
|
||
20th Feb 2016 12:01am |
|
|
All times are GMT |
< Previous Topic | Next Topic > |
Posting Rules
|
Site Copyright © 2006-2024 Futuranet Ltd & Martin Lewis