23ford
Well-known member
I use stands

If I am just changing wheels, then I might put a floor jack under the pinch weld by a particular corner so the vehicle is still on three tires at a time. Same idea if I were looking for a noisy rock in the tire. I just barely lift it high enough for the tire to come off the ground and never put my hands underneath, so there is minimal risk to me or the vehicle if the jack decides to collapse.I swap between summer and winter wheels on multiple cars, multiple times per year.
I was taught that jacks are only for jacking cars up, not supporting them. So I have a nice 3 ton floor jack that's reliable, but I always jack up the car, fiddle with getting jack stands positioned (and now I'm actually reaching under the car with no jack stands...), put the car on jack stands, change both front wheels, and reverse the process. Then do it again on the back.
Recently my friend told me I'm crazy for doing all that. If I just jacked the car up with the floor jack, I could swap the wheels in all of 30 seconds and without putting any part of myself under the car at all, or even getting down on the ground, which he says would actually be safer.
I do see the point that it almost seems safer not to piddle around with jack stands in cases where I'm not going under the car. After all, in an emergency you have to change the spare tire using the scissor jack and no jack stands. Only question is which is more reliable....a scissor jack on the side of the road or a big 3ton floor jack in a controlled environment...
So is "jacks are only for lifting" an overly broad rule?
If they are followed all the time they are good habits. I spent probably 7-8 hours this weekend under vehicles. As I have for many many weekends over many many years. I do not put my hands under a tire when the car is only on a jack, or under anything that would hit the ground if the jack fell down. I pay very close attention to where the vehicle would land if it falls. I do pull tires from the side, and yeah I've had a car fall off a jack before.Omitting jack stands when you're not getting any part of you under the vehicle is just fine. The problem is you have to police yourself - and it's easy to make a mistake.
You can't go taking safety shortcuts if you can't be trusted not to reach under there if a lug nut rolls away from you or sticking your arm inside to pull on a wheel that corrosion stuck onto the hub. Could you get too close when lining up the wheel and have your toes under the car? No bueno.
So of course you can do with a jack stand, if you're not putting ANY part of you under the vehicle, for any reason. You don't have to wear a helmet when welding either, provided you keep your eyes closed.
But are those good habits?
I will say that I've had a steel ramp fail - and it just crushed and dropped under load after the vehicle had been sitting on it for 30 minutes.
I built ramps out of 2x8. Four layers, each about 4" shorter than the next with a 45 cut on the leading edge of each to make the climb a little nicer. Glued and screwed together. No need to worry about failure with those.I will say that I've had a steel ramp fail - and it just crushed and dropped under load after the vehicle had been sitting on it for 30 minutes.
They were almost new ramps too - just collapsed with my Chevy Caprice on them. That was a long time ago, and I'm sure those plastic ones are better, but I have not used ramps since and probably never will. It was a good lesson for me not to trust a single lift source.
Exactly. It only takes a second.Changing one wheel/tire at a time? Just a jack is fine, but it's best to chock the wheels on the other end.
Jeez, you must be at least as old as I am!We sold "Bumper Jacks" - back when cars had steel bumpers. And "Scissors Jacks" (which became OEM standard on many import vehicles in the early 1970s.
I have seen them twisted, collapsed, pancaked. "Warranty" returns on the scissors jacks were off the charts - I suppose because people were positioning them improperly under the vehicles or (as I stupidly did myself one day on a sloped gravel road) weren't using them on a flat, level, hard surface. (I ended up rolling the Opel down the hill on the flat tire until I hit a mainline and flagged down another driver who was kind enough to help me out.)
Frtunately the sales rep (Bob Lee) sold us about 20 other lines and had no issue with writing us a credit for them.
It's a good question - but what conclusion would you draw, assuming the answer is no?Gotta ask.
Does everyone have a pair of jackstands in their car in case they have a flat?
I doubt most people, even the most ******** GJ folks do not.Gotta ask.
Does everyone have a pair of jackstands in their car in case they have a flat?
Side note: I admit that bumper jacks are sketchy. I've only used one in anger once. Far end of P-code Galaxie, all one million pounds of it, teetering in the breeze. I'm here to tell the tale, but it's not pretty.
I swap between summer and winter wheels on multiple cars, multiple times per year.
I was taught that jacks are only for jacking cars up, not supporting them. So I have a nice 3 ton floor jack that's reliable, but I always jack up the car, fiddle with getting jack stands positioned (and now I'm actually reaching under the car with no jack stands...), put the car on jack stands, change both front wheels, and reverse the process. Then do it again on the back.
Recently my friend told me I'm crazy for doing all that. If I just jacked the car up with the floor jack, I could swap the wheels in all of 30 seconds and without putting any part of myself under the car at all, or even getting down on the ground, which he says would actually be safer.
I do see the point that it almost seems safer not to piddle around with jack stands in cases where I'm not going under the car. After all, in an emergency you have to change the spare tire using the scissor jack and no jack stands. Only question is which is more reliable....a scissor jack on the side of the road or a big 3ton floor jack in a controlled environment...
So is "jacks are only for lifting" an overly broad rule?
It's a good question - but what conclusion would you draw, assuming the answer is no?
The one I am most familiar with was the Walker transmission jack. No idea of model number, but it had handwheels for controlling lift and tilt...., maybe someone should work on a top notch screw-type, or some other mechanical deal, rollaround jack (I swear that I used to have a vintage transmission jack that was like that). ...
By golly, I think you might be right. Kind of cool, but probably unbuildable now for any kind of decent price point. I left one behind in Tucson sometime in the late 1970s.The one I am most familiar with was the Walker transmission jack. No idea of model number, but it had handwheels for controlling lift and tilt.
I have a half dozen jack stands but prefer to use stacks of 2x6x8 lumber when I'm under the vehicles.