bwringer
Well-known member
A few weeks ago one bone-chilling night, my wife called from the side of the road about 40 minutes away with a flat tire.
Long story short, it was easiest and fastest for me to just drive up there and deal with it. Fortunately, it was a simple puncture and I plugged and re-inflated the tire and all is well.
Anyway, I used the scissor jack that came with her car to jack it up, and although I am a full-size American galoot, it was VERY difficult. Holy hell, that thing was a bear to turn. There's absolutely no way a 5'3" lady could have managed to get that thing in the air.
So. Is there a good alternative out there that's easier to turn?
I Googled for about two minutes, and there's an electric scissor jack that's about $70-$80.
I could just stick a little hydraulic jack in the car. I'm not sure whether it would lift far enough (would have to test this) and most don't have the slot to engage properly with the correct area of the "pinch weld". Plus it's bulky and will be in the way; ideally, we could just replace the stock jack so it's nice and tucked away.
Is there a geared version, something from a different car, or next level product out there to solve this problem?
The car is a 2018 Hyundai Santa Fe Sport trucklet, if that matters.
Long story short, it was easiest and fastest for me to just drive up there and deal with it. Fortunately, it was a simple puncture and I plugged and re-inflated the tire and all is well.
Anyway, I used the scissor jack that came with her car to jack it up, and although I am a full-size American galoot, it was VERY difficult. Holy hell, that thing was a bear to turn. There's absolutely no way a 5'3" lady could have managed to get that thing in the air.
So. Is there a good alternative out there that's easier to turn?
I Googled for about two minutes, and there's an electric scissor jack that's about $70-$80.
I could just stick a little hydraulic jack in the car. I'm not sure whether it would lift far enough (would have to test this) and most don't have the slot to engage properly with the correct area of the "pinch weld". Plus it's bulky and will be in the way; ideally, we could just replace the stock jack so it's nice and tucked away.
Is there a geared version, something from a different car, or next level product out there to solve this problem?
The car is a 2018 Hyundai Santa Fe Sport trucklet, if that matters.
If I had to use one of those I would be using a long tree branch to put the tire on and a 3 ft extension to start the lugnuts!! That thing looks terrible.

