Some notes, because I know alot of people want to have lifts in their garages (moved this to the correct section)
Tools Needed
3/4" Combination Wrench (for Hydraulic Fittings)
3/4" Socket and Wrench (for Banjo Fitting)
Phillips Screwdriver
Wire Stripper
10 mm wrench (for lag screws)
2 - 2x4 Wood - used for lever (8 feet in length)
Jackstand (lever fulcrum)
Straps
Pallet Jack
Grease Gun (for Zerk Fitting)
Tin Snips
Supplies Need
Thread Sealant
2 Gallon R&O Hydraulic Oil
125v / 15 AMP 3 Prong Plug
8MM OD Polyurethane PU Air Tube Hose (3 feet)
Grease
Where to Buy
Two Places sell them, Greg Smith Equipment Sales, eAutoTools.com.
Greg Smith Equipment - doesn't charge sales tax but shipping was alot more expensive
Unit Cost: 2295$
Shipping Cost: 430$+ (San Leandro Terminal)
eAutoTools - charges sales tax but shipping was alot less expensive.
Unit Cost: 2295$ ( plus -1% discount for getting on their mailing list)
Shipping Cost: 178$+ (Livermore Terminal)
Tax: 292.25$
In the end, Greg Smith Equipment was about 20$ less expensive than eAutoTools.com but meant that I had to pick it up at San Leandro vs. Livermore (from Dublin) - would have paid that as mileage rental for the truck so I chose what was closer.
I picked it up at the Freight Terminal (Will-Call) - instead of getting it delivered at home. It may have made more sense if they delivered it at home (I live in a Town house) but make sure the delivery truck has the capability of getting it down to the ground (lift gate service). MAKE SURE you rent a PALLET JACK (to get it into your garage - unless you have a Fork Lift at home). This thing weights 1200 lbs.
Considering I made it a lot more complicated for myself - I rented a 14 foot uHaul moving truck and went to the terminal. The Freight Company didn't have any issues loading it with their forklift. Mine was packaged up sitting on top two wooden pallets (pallets were side by side) - it may not fit in a pickup truck due to the raised wheel wells.
It was "FUN" trying to get it to the ground from the uHaul truck (yes, the aluminum ramps are strong enough to let it slide to the ground). You will definitely need a PALLET JACK to move this into your garage (rent one from your local equipment rental - around 40$ per day). Or you may get lucky and have 4 burly Nordic power lifters around as neighbors whose last names end with Magnusson (don't try it with your buddies though, might get a hernia). Once again, the platform is over 1200 lbs.
It also helps to make sure the delivery company gives you both "pieces" to the lift. Mine forgot to give me the control unit (had to pick it up the next day), they argued with me that 2 items meant the two pallets the platform was sitting on :rollseyes:
Upcoming notes:
B) Removing the pallets
C) Removing the platforms
D) Hookup hydraulic lines
E) Wire power cables
F) Putting it all together
Tools Needed
3/4" Combination Wrench (for Hydraulic Fittings)
3/4" Socket and Wrench (for Banjo Fitting)
Phillips Screwdriver
Wire Stripper
10 mm wrench (for lag screws)
2 - 2x4 Wood - used for lever (8 feet in length)
Jackstand (lever fulcrum)
Straps
Pallet Jack
Grease Gun (for Zerk Fitting)
Tin Snips
Supplies Need
Thread Sealant
2 Gallon R&O Hydraulic Oil
125v / 15 AMP 3 Prong Plug
8MM OD Polyurethane PU Air Tube Hose (3 feet)
Grease
Where to Buy
Two Places sell them, Greg Smith Equipment Sales, eAutoTools.com.
Greg Smith Equipment - doesn't charge sales tax but shipping was alot more expensive
Unit Cost: 2295$
Shipping Cost: 430$+ (San Leandro Terminal)
eAutoTools - charges sales tax but shipping was alot less expensive.
Unit Cost: 2295$ ( plus -1% discount for getting on their mailing list)
Shipping Cost: 178$+ (Livermore Terminal)
Tax: 292.25$
In the end, Greg Smith Equipment was about 20$ less expensive than eAutoTools.com but meant that I had to pick it up at San Leandro vs. Livermore (from Dublin) - would have paid that as mileage rental for the truck so I chose what was closer.
I picked it up at the Freight Terminal (Will-Call) - instead of getting it delivered at home. It may have made more sense if they delivered it at home (I live in a Town house) but make sure the delivery truck has the capability of getting it down to the ground (lift gate service). MAKE SURE you rent a PALLET JACK (to get it into your garage - unless you have a Fork Lift at home). This thing weights 1200 lbs.
Considering I made it a lot more complicated for myself - I rented a 14 foot uHaul moving truck and went to the terminal. The Freight Company didn't have any issues loading it with their forklift. Mine was packaged up sitting on top two wooden pallets (pallets were side by side) - it may not fit in a pickup truck due to the raised wheel wells.
It was "FUN" trying to get it to the ground from the uHaul truck (yes, the aluminum ramps are strong enough to let it slide to the ground). You will definitely need a PALLET JACK to move this into your garage (rent one from your local equipment rental - around 40$ per day). Or you may get lucky and have 4 burly Nordic power lifters around as neighbors whose last names end with Magnusson (don't try it with your buddies though, might get a hernia). Once again, the platform is over 1200 lbs.
It also helps to make sure the delivery company gives you both "pieces" to the lift. Mine forgot to give me the control unit (had to pick it up the next day), they argued with me that 2 items meant the two pallets the platform was sitting on :rollseyes:
Upcoming notes:
B) Removing the pallets
C) Removing the platforms
D) Hookup hydraulic lines
E) Wire power cables
F) Putting it all together
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