Hi All,
I bought a Greg Smith Atlas PVL-10 ALI certified lift in late 2020 and had it professionally installed (I really wanted to do it myself but the shipping logistics were a giant pain, so for a few bucks more it was worth it). I have used it fairly infrequently (less than 10 times) lifting anything from your typical Mazda/Honda 4 door to a Gen 1 Toyota Tundra, which I recently replaced with a RAM 1500
Throughout ownership, it always wobbled a bit but has been dead level. What got me concerned was recently I had my wife's Mazda 6 all the way up to the top. My garage attic floor is less than 12' so I had to cut a hole in the floor to allow the cylinder through. This time I had a little heartstopper as the piston top hit wood. I chalked it up to cutting the hole while unloaded vs loaded. and just made the hole wider.
Now that I have the RAM which is a bit heavier than the Tundra, I decided to do some maintenance on my lift before I put the new truck on it. Long story short I got to looking into the wobble. I had my kids jump on the arms to see if there was any movement... there was shake but no lifting. However the round shims under the plate spun a bit by hand when unloaded. I grabbed the torque wrench and that's when it hit me... these were WAY too loose. Not hand loose but def not 150 lb/ft. I torqued them all up and. while I got a little wedge shift/pop, maybe a touch of spin, there were no pullouts and they all torqued to 150. All rock solid now and still level.
My question is... How common is this? I don't recall my installer telling me to re-check torque but the GS manual may reference it (it's terrible so I am not looking forward to it lol). I see some advice on GJ both to always re-torque, and some to never re-torque. Clearly mine needed it despite very little use. My concrete is >6" at that spot and no cracks, but this whole thing has left me both concerned and scratching my head. Say that I was not technical enough to use a torque wrench (unlikely if I have a lift, but go with it lol) Is this something the installer normally covers, or would I be on my own after install?
Thanks for any advice!
I bought a Greg Smith Atlas PVL-10 ALI certified lift in late 2020 and had it professionally installed (I really wanted to do it myself but the shipping logistics were a giant pain, so for a few bucks more it was worth it). I have used it fairly infrequently (less than 10 times) lifting anything from your typical Mazda/Honda 4 door to a Gen 1 Toyota Tundra, which I recently replaced with a RAM 1500
Throughout ownership, it always wobbled a bit but has been dead level. What got me concerned was recently I had my wife's Mazda 6 all the way up to the top. My garage attic floor is less than 12' so I had to cut a hole in the floor to allow the cylinder through. This time I had a little heartstopper as the piston top hit wood. I chalked it up to cutting the hole while unloaded vs loaded. and just made the hole wider.
Now that I have the RAM which is a bit heavier than the Tundra, I decided to do some maintenance on my lift before I put the new truck on it. Long story short I got to looking into the wobble. I had my kids jump on the arms to see if there was any movement... there was shake but no lifting. However the round shims under the plate spun a bit by hand when unloaded. I grabbed the torque wrench and that's when it hit me... these were WAY too loose. Not hand loose but def not 150 lb/ft. I torqued them all up and. while I got a little wedge shift/pop, maybe a touch of spin, there were no pullouts and they all torqued to 150. All rock solid now and still level.
My question is... How common is this? I don't recall my installer telling me to re-check torque but the GS manual may reference it (it's terrible so I am not looking forward to it lol). I see some advice on GJ both to always re-torque, and some to never re-torque. Clearly mine needed it despite very little use. My concrete is >6" at that spot and no cracks, but this whole thing has left me both concerned and scratching my head. Say that I was not technical enough to use a torque wrench (unlikely if I have a lift, but go with it lol) Is this something the installer normally covers, or would I be on my own after install?
Thanks for any advice!
