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Sears floor jack that has held up well

wazzabie

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Joined
May 9, 2010
Messages
424
Does anyone have this sears floor jack? It has been a great floor jack without any problems. Never have needed to add any jack fluid to it.


-3-ton-hydraulic-floor-jack-1_19920161332371341131.jpg
 
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sz0k30

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 12, 2014
Messages
886
Location
SE Michigan
I've had my green one probably close to 50 years, never did any maintenance on it and it still works great!

Those jacks were from a time when "Craftsman" was a name to be proud of and stood for quality.
 

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Ran58

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Joined
Jul 19, 2019
Messages
162
Location
Georgia
I have that same Sears floor jack that belonged to my father. We had it rebuilt in the 90’s and it works well but every since then the white handle will not go up beyond a out 45 degrees.

Prior to the rebuild the handle would go up to about 90 degrees perpendicular to the floor. This is kind of annoying because it takes up more room to store the jack. Does anyone know what the cause may be for the jack handle to not go back up like it used to.

thanks
 

theoldwizard1

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Joined
Feb 22, 2011
Messages
43,250
Location
SE MI
I've had my green one probably close to 50 years, never did any maintenance on it and it still works great!
The green ones used the Sears label, not Craftsman, because the were sold in the automotive department, not hardware.

Take the outer mechanisms apart, clean and lube and it will work like new !
 

Roberts210

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Joined
Dec 21, 2015
Messages
3,177
Location
Missouri
I just went up to my shop and looked at mine. I can't see anything in normal operation that would cause that. Maybe the handle is installed incorrectly. I suggest you remove the handle and reinstall it.
I have that same Sears floor jack that belonged to my father. We had it rebuilt in the 90’s and it works well but every since then the white handle will not go up beyond a out 45 degrees.

Prior to the rebuild the handle would go up to about 90 degrees perpendicular to the floor. This is kind of annoying because it takes up more room to store the jack. Does anyone know what the cause may be for the jack handle to not go back up like it used to.

thank
 

Ran58

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 19, 2019
Messages
162
Location
Georgia
I just went up to my shop and looked at mine. I can't see anything in normal operation that would cause that. Maybe the handle is installed incorrectly. I suggest you remove the handle and reinstall it.
Thanks Robert, I’ve looked at it before and couldn’t see why it wouldn’t go up.
 

JRC3

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Joined
Jun 30, 2014
Messages
12,481
Location
Southwestern OH
I have a well used one. I flipped it sideways once to try and remove a hitch and got air in the wrong place or something. I don't recall exactly what I did but I got it bled and added fluid.

searsjack.jpg


But sometimes the old Sears isn't quite tall enough so I keep thinking of buying a new Daytona low profile rapid pump but I don't use a jack too much having a mid-lift.
 

sdowney717

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Joined
Mar 17, 2010
Messages
964
I have that identical looking jack, but it is not a Sears jack.

Allied Model 45426 bought at Sam's club in the mid 90's.

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It is dumb they put the grease fitting off to the side, grease shows up on one side of shaft, not the other, but they knew that. I was thinking maybe a US Patent design issue. Can not infringe on a patent without paying.
I drilled a hole in the front saddle pivot and put in a grease fitting. That has a center rod in a welded bushing. Now it is greaseable. The jack goes up effortlessly. It is a well made jack.
 

sdowney717

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Joined
Mar 17, 2010
Messages
964
Here is how I finally fixed the dumb hex handle design, I turned it into a slot and pin for the relief valve.

 

whateg01

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Joined
Mar 13, 2006
Messages
11,482
Location
doo dah, kansas, usa
I have that same Sears floor jack that belonged to my father. We had it rebuilt in the 90’s and it works well but every since then the white handle will not go up beyond a out 45 degrees.

Prior to the rebuild the handle would go up to about 90 degrees perpendicular to the floor. This is kind of annoying because it takes up more room to store the jack. Does anyone know what the cause may be for the jack handle to not go back up like it used to.

thanks
I'd suspect air in the system. Need to bleed it.
 
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Ed in Virginia

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Joined
Jul 30, 2022
Messages
205
Location
Montpelier, VA
I have that same Sears floor jack that belonged to my father. We had it rebuilt in the 90’s and it works well but every since then the white handle will not go up beyond a out 45 degrees.

Prior to the rebuild the handle would go up to about 90 degrees perpendicular to the floor. This is kind of annoying because it takes up more room to store the jack. Does anyone know what the cause may be for the jack handle to not go back up like it used to.

thanks
Here's the owner's manual with the parts breakdown and a couple of close-ups of mine. Hope this helps you solve it because this is a great jack.
 

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sdowney717

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Joined
Mar 17, 2010
Messages
964
I have that same Sears floor jack that belonged to my father. We had it rebuilt in the 90’s and it works well but every since then the white handle will not go up beyond a out 45 degrees.

Prior to the rebuild the handle would go up to about 90 degrees perpendicular to the floor. This is kind of annoying because it takes up more room to store the jack. Does anyone know what the cause may be for the jack handle to not go back up like it used to.

thanks
Make sure jack lift arm is all the way down.
Remove the handle from the lower part, it is one bolt, then remove the 2 big side bolts for the cast iron lower handle lever thing with the spring return that is supposed to lift up the handle. Slip it out from the jack frame. Then you can see why it is hanging up. Take a photo of it all together so you can refer to it when putting it back together. Be careful you don't pull out the piston plunger or oil may come out.

It's really a simple design. The flat cut in the piston plunger rod which pushes the plunger down is supposed to face down and also grease all the parts. The piston plunger also faces so it's opening faces to the rear.
1680951608457.png

When putting the big bolts back in, put the left bolt in first. Then the big bolt with handle return spring second. I find I have to push on the spring perhaps with a hammer handle end to help line up the bolt threads.
 

sdowney717

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Joined
Mar 17, 2010
Messages
964
This green pictured one shows piston plunger U facing the wrong way from mine.
It may work that way, but it is harder to put together facing that way.

1680951987763.png
 

Ed in Virginia

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Joined
Jul 30, 2022
Messages
205
Location
Montpelier, VA
This green pictured one shows piston plunger U facing the wrong way from mine.
It may work that way, but it is harder to put together facing that way.

1680951987763.png
This is how it came from Sears when I bought it new in '77 and has never been apart. I still regularly use it to this day. In addition to typical wheel service use, I'll bet I've dropped more than 50 VW engines with it over the years.
 

sdowney717

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Mar 17, 2010
Messages
964
This is how it came from Sears when I bought it new in '77 and has never been apart. I still regularly use it to this day. In addition to typical wheel service use, I'll bet I've dropped more than 50 VW engines with it over the years.
I found when repairing jacks like this, I was more likely to accidently pull the plunger out of the bore hole setting it like in your green jack.
 

Ran58

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Joined
Jul 19, 2019
Messages
162
Location
Georgia
Thanks sdowney and edinvirginia. A wealth of information on this site. I’m going to look at my jack again next week and see if I can figure it out.
 

Hiball

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Joined
Apr 30, 2009
Messages
14,032
Location
Missery
Does anyone know what the cause may be for the jack handle to not go back up like it used to.
Whomever reinstalled the pump piston has it backwards and it’s bottoming out, this is preventing your handle from sitting forward of 90 degrees.
This green pictured one shows piston plunger U facing the wrong way from mine.
It may work that way, but it is harder to put together facing that way.

1680951987763.png
That is the correct orientation .
 

sdowney717

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Joined
Mar 17, 2010
Messages
964
Whomever reinstalled the pump piston has it backwards and it’s bottoming out, this is preventing your handle from sitting forward of 90 degrees.

That is the correct orientation .
Interesting as both my jacks have the plunger piston with the open U facing to the rear and the handles go all the way up. I could see a handle not going up all the way if the rod that fits in there then hits the back of the U, maybe different U lengths are made.
 

Ed in Virginia

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Joined
Jul 30, 2022
Messages
205
Location
Montpelier, VA
Interesting as both my jacks have the plunger piston with the open U facing to the rear and the handles go all the way up. I could see a handle not going up all the way if the rod that fits in there then hits the back of the U, maybe different U lengths are made.
Mine has the "U" facing to the front and my handle goes from 0 to 90 degrees with no issues. As I said, mine came new out of the box with it facing that direction. My jack has never been disassembled so it was clearly manufactured that way.
 

RAYJAY

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Joined
May 29, 2006
Messages
2,638
Location
UNION DALE PA
have this one from the mid/ late 70,s i think ant can date better let me know. do want to repaint any have a color match close?




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Ran58

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 19, 2019
Messages
162
Location
Georgia
Can I ask another question about floor jacks. The Sears jack that I asked about earlier does not lift easily. I was under the impression (and I could be wrong) that a floor jack should lift a load fairly easily. But my fathers jack takes a pretty good bit of downforce when you are lifting something heavy, like the front end of a car. Does this indicate a problem with the jack?

if you try to lift something heavier than what a jack is rated for does it damage the jack? For example, if you have a 1 1/2 ton jack and you try to lift something that weight 2 tons, does this damage the jack?

thanks
 

sdowney717

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 17, 2010
Messages
964
Mine has the "U" facing to the front and my handle goes from 0 to 90 degrees with no issues. As I said, mine came new out of the box with it facing that direction. My jack has never been disassembled so it was clearly manufactured that way.
yeah, I believe it. I looked at both my jacks and it can fit either way and wont affect the handle going upright. Maybe some U's are shorter and will do that.
 

Ed in Virginia

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Joined
Jul 30, 2022
Messages
205
Location
Montpelier, VA
if you try to lift something heavier than what a jack is rated for does it damage the jack? For example, if you have a 1 1/2 ton jack and you try to lift something that weight 2 tons, does this damage the jack?
Not if the relief valve is properly set. That's what its purpose is. You can see where it is in the manual that I posted above.
 

potatobeetle

New member
Joined
Jan 15, 2024
Messages
2
I have a similar jack. The internal components differ from the sears 328 diagrams that I have been able to find. The two plastic gaskets for the tank are not included in sears seal kits that I have found. No tags or model numbers engraved on the unit. Does anyone have an idea about make/model? Thanks in advance!

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