So, I bought one ESCO 22-Ton Jack Stand from Zoro. With the 20% coupon, I paid around $110.00. Advertised as
22 Ton per Jack - not pair. Only to find out HF started selling a similar model (overdue!). Visited the store today and couldn't tell any difference between the brands. Only HF advertises the Daytona as
22 Ton per pair.
I know steel matters, but both coming out of China...what gives?! If anything, the Daytona pin looked a bit thicker to me.
My ESCO
Daytona pic From HF dot COM...Looks better in person.
I looked at these the other day, and agree the stand appears to be seriously beefy...
This phenomenon is also true of the new Esco-style Daytona puck stands.
I have a set of both the Esco and the new Daytona puck-style stands, and they seem to be very equivalent. I haven't weighed them, but the posts/etc. are interchangeable. The top of the Daytona stand is a different design, and the puck is attached to the post (which I like vs. the Esco design to be honest). HF claims them at 3 tons, but Esco says very-specifically on their site "3 tons (per stand)" - If that maps to a claim of 6 tons per pair, I have to say I would not trust the Esco set for that much weight. If I needed to support 12K lb., I'd probably have 10-ton stands.
Harbor Freight is incorrect.
https://agradetools.com/jack-stands-rating/
"After ASME PASE-2014 became effective in 2015 all jack stands must be rated per pair and not per individual stand. Previously, some companies were advertising jack stands with individual ratings, but in 2019 you will always be seeing jack stands rated as a pair. Therefore, a 6-ton rated jack stand has only a 3-ton maximum load individually. Therefore, make sure when buying jack stands, you get a pair with a weight rating higher than the vehicle you will be using them under. Also, even if a jack stand is individually stamped as “3-ton or 6-ton” it is still referring to its weight rating as a pair– confusing, to say the least."
I'm confused - you're saying HF is incorrect, but my reading of that ASME bit would seem to say stands should be rated as a pair. ESCO is the only company I've seen rate stands singly.
I am not sure I would get under 22 or 44 tons don't care whats holding it up.
Maybe with a lot of cribbing and custom stands, etc. But yeah...
Do people find this type of stand safer than a normal ESCO 3 ton or 6 ton if they make them? Looking at upgrading my normal 3 tons to something a bit more robust, but not sure if this sort of thing is nuts hah
The 22-ton have a height-range to just-under 20" where the puck-style is rated to just-under 22". Personally, I do not like my Esco/Daytona puck stands under load at anything higher than 20", and most of the time I'm not going to get quite that high. With the 22-ton, the design looks like it would be completely stable at the top of its rated height.
Stands are supposed to have a lot of safety factor in these ratings, but I'm generally going to over-do it on load-rating/etc. The 22-ton are over three times heavier than the puck stands, so would be a bit onerous to sling around. I dig the design a lot though. A 10-ton version would be tempting if I needed any more stands.