If it is a true Mohawk brand lift, I would call the company, to get the name of a representative in your area. The guy that sells them here installs them for about $350. New or used, he has done them all, knows what to look for and what to look out for. Not saying that nobody but him should put them up, but at least you know its right.
I put my brand new System 1A in Dec 2011, a lot of fun - I'd highly recommend as a do-it-yourself.
Tips? Lets see - my dealer warned me to be careful carrying the lift arms, it is easy to slip your fingers into the arm and then have the inner arm come crashing into them. I was glad to learn that lesson second hand. The lift is heavy, as you know. I carried mine home in my f350 and you could tell it was there. I disbanded mine and lifted the columns out individually with a small loader - you'll find the weight is where the carriage is. My loader is rated 500kg (1100lb), and the main column is everything it wanted to lift. I used the loader to stand the columns up, and I had a friend help with this part of the install. Once the columns are standing they are relatively easy to maneuver where you want them, and they are quite stable just free standing. I rented a hammer drill (and bit) from HD, drill through the baseplate, it is way easier than you might expect.
Shim the columns, the tops should "crowd the line" towards leaning away from each other. The install kit has everything you'll need. You will need atf - the reservoir is shipped full but the cylinders are not. The install kit includes a mating electrical receptacle that is appropriate for a pendant mount - I needed a box mount version that was easy to find on eBay.
My ceiling height was about 2" too low, but with only hydraulic lines between the two posts it was very easy to shorten the lines. (My justification for choosing Mohawk).
Personal choice: should you grease the surface where the arms rotate on the carriages? I think my dealer suggested yes, but I chose not too, thinking grease would become a dirt magnet. They work great.
Suggest you get the optional weight gauge - though ridiculously priced it is American made by Lenz and is very cool. You are in so deep now why stop?
Let me know if you have any other questions I can help with - you're going to love your new lift. The quality is simply outstanding.
Dan
That's who I bought it from. We have the "Northeast Premium". Installs here start at $500.
ac
For $500 pay him and be done with it. He has the tools, shims, swage lock bolts, and experience. I had my used system 1 installed by the local distributor. And it was impressive watching these guys work. No guessing, farting around or nothing. They even had a jig to place the arms relative to each other, an expensive flair tool to flair the stainless lines(because I ran them 17"high), and a huge selection of shims for the column bases, and tops of the rams to level them.
Chris
Chris,
Not gonna happen. The distributor gave me the shims and Wej-its. I have the tools. The distributor himself said "if you have the ability to work on cars yourself to the point of thinking you need a lift...you can install the lift".
Using the logic you presented, we should all be paying "professionals" to work on the very cars we are putting on these lifts.
$500 is $500.
ac
According to the Mohawk existing floor specs, no!
http://www.mohawklifts.com/library/manuals/Slab_Require_Recommend_11_07.pdf
"All 2-post lifts require a continuous single slab. Spanning expansion seams or positioning posts on separate slabs is not acceptable"
"DO NOT install any Mohawk lift on expansion seams or on cracked or defective concrete. All 3⁄4 inch diameter anchors must be a minimum of 6 inches away from any expansion seams, control joints or other inconsistencies in the concrete. All 1 inch diameter anchors must be a minimum of 7 1⁄2 inches away from any expansion seams, control joints or other inconsistencies in the concrete. Refer to anchor manufacturer specifications for specific information concerning edge distances and bolt to bolt distance requirements."
Chris
