Your whole problem may be where you are centering the lift on the car. If you can hang it more forewords or backwards to catch your lift points do it. The weight doesn't have to be perfectly distributed, especially on lighter cars. Don't start saying it's unsafe, Asy lifts hang cars off the back and are not properly centered from the get go......
Yup. that's what I was trying to convey earlier
What is this locating pocket?
There is no way to put the car in and reach all 4 lift points on the actual lift pads of the lift...
ac
Sorry, didn't phrase my question as a question. I was trying to find out if you had a locating pad mounted to the concrete to position the car. gives you a little bump to feel when pulling in to give consistent position. From your response I can tell the answer's "no". doesn't matter at this point since you answered the other question taht it doesn't matter if you roll forward or back.
I still have trouble believing this is "right". Professional shops have wood blocking around to put vehicles on lifts?
ac
For not having all 4 arms locate properly, I'm not sure what to do about it. In my time at school and in the shop I never ran into this problem (and being the biggest guy in the shop, guess who got to drive in all the tiny old fiats?). I put all sorts of tiny cars on the same 9klb lift I put LWB duallies on. fiat x1/9, spiders, new mini coopers, miatas, fieros, etc.
OK, just looked up the MDX...not exactly what I'd call a small, short WB vehicle but I guess that's perspective. For the front pads, are you lifting by the pinch welds or the pseudo-frame stubs inboard from them? I can imagine where you might have trouble hitting the pinch welds on all 4 corners. THAT problem I have had.
With a picture stolen from the internet: are you putting the lift arm where this pic has the jack stand or at the bottom right corner of the pic?