RustyBeechwood
New member
Hi all,
I've owned a name-brand, high-quality, ~10,000-lb. 2-post lift since new and it's provided trouble-free service for almost 15 years. I recently moved to the southeast and brought my lift with me.
Wanting an OEM-quality install, I contracted with the manufacturer's regional office. Unfortunately, the regional office sub-contracted out to an installer that while seemed generally knowledgeable about lifts (I was present during the install) I now have some reason to doubt. Here are my concerns, in order of increasing severity:
1. Installer told me after the install that they had never installed this brand of lift before. (I am not that concerned about this - the lift works fine.)
2. Installer, nor regional office, never asked me about the characteristics of my garage floor. I do know that is was poured in the late 1980s, has a very smooth and crack-free surface, and is at least 5 inches thick (having drilled a test hole - I did that, not them). But I have no idea about PSI or whether there is any internal reinforcement.
3. Installer used 3/4" anchors. This in itself is not a problem because the lift manual says 3/4" or 1" anchors are acceptable; the problem is that I believe the anchors were overtightened. I believe this because when I asked how much I should periodically re-torque them to, the installer said 100-110 ft-lb. (My understanding is that a proper torque for 3/4" anchors is more like 70 ft-lb and their stated value is more appropriate for 1" anchors.)
I lost my best friend recently and have become acutely aware of my own mortality. The last thing I need is for my garage floor to crack or (I think more likely) the anchors pulling out of the floor. I know this can happen based on other discussions on this forum, and that it can happen months or years after an install.
Please let me know any thoughts that can help me decide what steps I can take to ensure safety. I'd really appreciate it if your input is fact- and experience-driven and not simply based on conjecture. I believe there are tests that can be done in terms of pull-out strength and the like but am not sure if it is necessary. Thanks in advance.
I've owned a name-brand, high-quality, ~10,000-lb. 2-post lift since new and it's provided trouble-free service for almost 15 years. I recently moved to the southeast and brought my lift with me.
Wanting an OEM-quality install, I contracted with the manufacturer's regional office. Unfortunately, the regional office sub-contracted out to an installer that while seemed generally knowledgeable about lifts (I was present during the install) I now have some reason to doubt. Here are my concerns, in order of increasing severity:
1. Installer told me after the install that they had never installed this brand of lift before. (I am not that concerned about this - the lift works fine.)
2. Installer, nor regional office, never asked me about the characteristics of my garage floor. I do know that is was poured in the late 1980s, has a very smooth and crack-free surface, and is at least 5 inches thick (having drilled a test hole - I did that, not them). But I have no idea about PSI or whether there is any internal reinforcement.
3. Installer used 3/4" anchors. This in itself is not a problem because the lift manual says 3/4" or 1" anchors are acceptable; the problem is that I believe the anchors were overtightened. I believe this because when I asked how much I should periodically re-torque them to, the installer said 100-110 ft-lb. (My understanding is that a proper torque for 3/4" anchors is more like 70 ft-lb and their stated value is more appropriate for 1" anchors.)
I lost my best friend recently and have become acutely aware of my own mortality. The last thing I need is for my garage floor to crack or (I think more likely) the anchors pulling out of the floor. I know this can happen based on other discussions on this forum, and that it can happen months or years after an install.
Please let me know any thoughts that can help me decide what steps I can take to ensure safety. I'd really appreciate it if your input is fact- and experience-driven and not simply based on conjecture. I believe there are tests that can be done in terms of pull-out strength and the like but am not sure if it is necessary. Thanks in advance.
