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Best Flour Jack

Ben1967

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Jan 28, 2017
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170
Location
York PA
The old craftsman floor jack finally blew out on me. So I'm now in the market, i was looking at the matco 2 ton. I was looking at the two ton jack, but i would love one made in the U.S.A! So please let me know your thoughts on which 2 ton I should look into buying.

Thanks, Ben
 
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Michael_in_DE

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May 11, 2017
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Wilmington, DE
Are you jacking up sacks of flour? I would just use a sugar jack and be done with it.


York! Used to live just north in Dover PA. Decent town.

I'd go with matco, they make pretty decent stuff.
 

deberly12

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Jun 7, 2017
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383
Location
Lebanon County, PA
Not USA made but Harbor Freight makes very nice Jacks. They are better than the medium end jacks. I have never used a real high end one. Whatever you get make sure it has a universal for lowering. Not the old crappy gear style.

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48548

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May 14, 2008
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Phoenix
I would recommend AC Hydraulics... I have a 2 ton and it works fine on my duramax...
 

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beamrider

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Jan 21, 2013
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Columbus OH (displaced from Wheeling)
Not flower, flour.


giphy.gif
 

kkroger

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Apr 21, 2013
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1,143
My Yellow Jacket Jack from Northern Tool is NICE, Rapid Pump, High Lift, Good Capacity... They had a deal on it at $169... when I got it and they gave me my $20 off a $100 purchase too.
 

wmm2

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Jan 10, 2016
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Location
Cincinnati, Ohio
Are you jacking up sacks of flour? I would just use a sugar jack and be done with it.


York! Used to live just north in Dover PA. Decent town.

I'd go with matco, they make pretty decent stuff.

It's not flour, it's flower. His voice recognition on his phone probably picked the wrong word.

And in case you were wondering, the flower jack is used when you're pushing up daisies. You're welcome.
 

Hiball

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Apr 30, 2009
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Location
Missery
HW93642 May not be 100% made in the USA today, but there isn't a model alive that has more support in regards to parts and service. I would definitely shop around, as prices are over the place. I talked to someone the other day that got a crazy deal at northern with some coupons.
 

speedfreek1210

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Joined
Mar 9, 2012
Messages
81
Location
Thurmont, Maryland
I have the Hein-Werner 93642. I've had it for 5 years. No problems at all. I love it.

I ordered it from sears.com to pick it up in store. When I went to get it the handle was MIA. Sears wouldn't do anything for me, they gave me a phone to call hein warner directly to see what could be done. I got a nice lady on the phone, took my address and said it would be shipped to my house. She also told me if I any other problems came up and I needed parts or support to call and they would be happy to help.

If I need another jack I would definitely buy another Hein-Werner.


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pepi

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Mar 27, 2013
Messages
2,883
Location
Woodstock, GA
Milwaukee Model 20. Be seated when they tell you the cost.

http://www.milwaukeejack.com/model20.pdf


Agree, as the Milwaukee being the best, could not justify the cost for my needs.

Went one step down and purchased HeinWerner 3 Ton.

The reason: has the right saddle 6.5'' not one of those goofy 4.5" hockey puck jobs found on 98% of floor jacks. Considering the Milwaukee & HeinWerner have full size saddles, larger frame, and wider stance makes it stouter, @ 110 lbs.

I will pass this along, the jack allows for unbelievable control when lowering the car. The trick, is to not close the valve with any more force than it takes to raise the car.

Crank the valve closed and you will quickly find it will take two hands and a gorilla grip to get the car to start to lower. When it lets lose, it is on the ground quickly.

Example lowering a car to touch tires enough to allow the lugs to be torqued to spec.



greg
 
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JohnDeere1

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Jun 21, 2017
Messages
710
Location
Kentucky
I like my ble point 3.5 ton it will lift all the flour or flowers i want even the floor lol. Kidding aside its a great jack ad I like the low profile I kinda wish I'd bought a 2 ton as this jack is more than I need but paid $190 used from a pawn it's $500 new you can get it for under $250 branded Blackhawk online.
 

wmm2

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Jan 10, 2016
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Location
Cincinnati, Ohio
Any substantiation to this claim?

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Snap on vs HF lawsuit

"Harbor Freight also alleged Snap-on’s jacks were made in the same factory as the Harbor Freight ones and the company’s business model is what caused a higher price. Snap-on denied those allegations in its response."

It's interesting to see HF on one hand claim they didn't copy SO's jack, and that they look different, but on the other hand imply they are the same. Snap On of course denied that they are the same.
 
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48548

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May 14, 2008
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Phoenix
I guess no love for AC Hydraulics, but me... Oh well.... I would love a Milwaukee, but the price was out of my reach, I would look at the HW as well.... I think AC hydraulics as they make long reach and a bunch of other ones and the rebuild kits are cheap at 30$.
 

TractorMechanic

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Apr 22, 2017
Messages
27
Location
Texas
The Napa 3.5 ton 791-6440 and HF 4 ton have held up well. I will say that the Napa has a more solid feel than the HF when jacking a vehicle. It has a rubber saddle pad and also has the slow release feature. Yes it costs more, but appears to be well worth the higher price.
 

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yamaha0343

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Jan 5, 2016
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459
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South Louisiana
I know Craftsman isn't very loved these days, but I've had one of their 3 ton floor jacks for about 10 years now. Nice thick handle, and very easy to control lowering the vehicle. It's lifted everything from trucks to boat trailers to campers. I think I paid $100 or so for it. No idea who actually makes it. My old man bought the $99 set up with the stands and the creeper included, and I don't think he's had any issues with it.

eta. Just noticed that your Craftsman failed. Carry on. :lol:
 
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Gmonkee

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May 9, 2010
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2,684
Go with a 4 ton jack whatever brand you go with. Having that extra capacity will be a blessing.

It also brings in a safety factor when a lot of the newer stuff plays closer to the rating than the older ones did.
 

FigureItOut

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Bentonville AR

Farmall450

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I own the Daytona, and followed the very long thread on it. I haven't read anything convincing me that the HF and SO are the same OEM. They may be, and I'm not biased against that possibility, just not convinced of it.

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Not much to read when you look at them and they're identical. Maybe 3 posts in Hiball explains it.

It's not like HF & SO have produced their own jacks for decades and two looking strikingly similar...rather, they purchased identical or nearly identical ones from the same player.
 

laser3kw

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Nov 17, 2012
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7,276
Location
northen IL
Go look at the Harbor Freight light weight aluminum jacks. They maneuver much easier and are great if you have to lift them up. I lift mine onto the air lift to use with lawn equipment.

2.5 ton aluminum floor jack link

PS / Edit
Sorry OP - I was in such a rush to tell you about the lightweight jack, I forgot you are looking for USA made.

Any way, Vintage Craftsman stuff is desirable. Ever consider rebuilding it? There is a sticky at the top of General tool discussion with lots of help to get you there.
 
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TractorMechanic

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Apr 22, 2017
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Location
Texas
Go look at the Harbor Freight light weight aluminum jacks. They maneuver much easier and are great if you have to lift them up. I lift mine onto the air lift to use with lawn equipment.

2.5 ton aluminum floor jack link

PS / Edit
Sorry OP - I was in such a rush to tell you about the lightweight jack, I forgot you are looking for USA made.

Same here. I forgot about the made in USA part.
 

artbuc

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Aug 28, 2009
Messages
144
I own the Daytona, and followed the very long thread on it. I haven't read anything convincing me that the HF and SO are the same OEM. They may be, and I'm not biased against that possibility, just not convinced of it.

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Maybe my memory is faulty, but I thought Hiball tore down the Daytona and proved it was inferior to the SO?
 

wmm2

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Cincinnati, Ohio
Any substantiation to this claim?

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Maybe my memory is faulty, but I thought Hiball tore down the Daytona and proved it was inferior to the SO?

I think your memory is correct; I remember the same thread. I think the point Hiball was making was the SO was more rebuildable than the HF model. I could believe both points of view, that the OEM could be the same, but the quality may not be. The Vega and the Cadillac both came from company.
 

FigureItOut

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Maybe my memory is faulty, but I thought Hiball tore down the Daytona and proved it was inferior to the SO?
I don't recall a teardown of the SO, just the Daytona. I seem to remember he found the Daytona to have decent components and build but with a glaring and fatal flaw, which was that they used an inferior type of seal.

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artbuc

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Aug 28, 2009
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He didn't tear down the SO. He did offer to if someone wanted to send him theirs though.

Right. He confirmed HF "cheaped out" with Oring retainer compared to SO claim to use U cup. However, he certainly is not a fan of SO and apparently would not be surprised if the SO and HF rams were identical. I hope Hiball weighs in if I have mischaracterized his position.
 

chilly460

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Jun 17, 2011
Messages
206
Another vote for Hein Werner 93642. They're as low as $240 right now. I've had mine six years and love it, still works as smooth as new, lets the vehicle down with full control. Pumps consistently, very good casters/wheels as well. By far the best jack I've owned.
 
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