[AT] Neat jack idea
Cecil Bearden
crbearden at copper.net
Sun Jan 13 20:04:58 PST 2008
If you still have one with the wooden handle, then it is the best made
one, old enough to be built! I have used them for many years, now I use
a forklift or have a winch truck handy. I bought 15 of them many years
ago that the State Wildlife dept had used in their game warden trucks.
We rebuilt a bunch of them. If you wrapped the Jack in an oily burlap
sack and then with a plastic bag, it would work fine. In a pinch you
can pee on the spring mechanism and it will work. I never worried about
lowering anything, because as soon as it went down 3 slots, it fell.
Usually just backed or drove off of it.
Baxter Black did a great routine on one of them years ago. It was so
true and so funny at the time I almost fell out of the seat laughing.
Cecil in OKla
hank at millerfarm.com wrote:
> There are two safe ways to use any jack of any type. The first is to
> know all possible ways the load could fall, and then physically place
> everyone (humans, cats, dogs, cows, ...) outside of that range. The
> other, more practical way is to have good stable jack stands underthe
> load. If the load will go very high you may have to jack up a
> little, put the stand in place, jack some more, add a second stand,
> then jack, then adjust the first stand, until you get things high
> enough.
>
> Your cribbing is fine for when the jack itself fails to hold the load,
> but the jack can tip. Your stands have a base that will not tip
> (Make sure your stands really are stable. A log can be a good stand,
> or it could be a bad one)
>
> If I never again lose a friend because the jack supporting his
> car/whatever fell over it will be all right with me.
>
> Jacks are for lifting, use solid stands once the load is lifted.
> This goes for any jack, not just the hi-lift type.
>
> The bottom line is think safety. So use your brain.
>
> Quoting charlie hill <chill8 at suddenlink.net>:
>
>> I think the safe way to use those jacks (if the situation will allow) is to
>> have some cribing on hand. Jack the load up 4 inches or so, insert a piece
>> of cribbing (cribing sp ?), go another 4 inches add another piece, etc.
>> That way if the jacks decides to auto-rachet down or turn over the load
>> can't fall very far. Of course most of the time you would need it when
>> there was no cribing to be found.
>
>
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>
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