Before anyone tells me; yes I know it is a safety device. 
My BendPak lift has a safety stop system that is running me nuts. It requires the lifting of a pin while positioning the yellow lift arms under the vehicle. It then engages a lock system so the arms can't be moved. While I can see in lawsuit happy society the manufacturer needing such a device, I don't see where it is doing me any good, nor is it saving me from myself. My reasoning is that once the arms come in contact with the frame of the vehicle they can no longer move, even without the locking system. Back in the day, when I worked in a service station, we did not have these types of locks on our lifts, but granted the lifts were of a different design (single post into the floor). I always check a vehicle when the arms contact the frame and again when I have the tires are a few inches off of the floor. So I don't see how the arms can move with all that weight on them. Am I missing something?


My BendPak lift has a safety stop system that is running me nuts. It requires the lifting of a pin while positioning the yellow lift arms under the vehicle. It then engages a lock system so the arms can't be moved. While I can see in lawsuit happy society the manufacturer needing such a device, I don't see where it is doing me any good, nor is it saving me from myself. My reasoning is that once the arms come in contact with the frame of the vehicle they can no longer move, even without the locking system. Back in the day, when I worked in a service station, we did not have these types of locks on our lifts, but granted the lifts were of a different design (single post into the floor). I always check a vehicle when the arms contact the frame and again when I have the tires are a few inches off of the floor. So I don't see how the arms can move with all that weight on them. Am I missing something?


