west coast
Member
Hey guys, with all this talk about lifts, I thought I'd check and see if anyone has one, maybe some pictures and comments on how you set them up and how well they suit a home garage
Thanks, George
Thanks, George

Pits are great for heavy equipment but they can be very dangerous and have replaced by lifts in most shops. I don't know that a home owners insurance policy would allow one and in the states OSHA has some rather lengthy policy on them.
Steve
If you know of prohibitions to service pits, like as not you are speaking of Cal OSHA which is different than federal OSHA. California is one of OSHA's State Plan States, meaning they can, have, and continue to go regulation crazy, much more so than the Federal OSHA states such as Kansas. My point being, in the Federal states service pits are not outlawed so to speak, as long as the company guards against obvious hazards such as the fall hazards.
I did not say prohibition, I said there are a number of safety issues that have to be met. Many quick lube places have pit here, I never said they were not legal. There are many heavy equipment shops that have pits as well. That said between confined space, explosive atmosphere and, fall hazards "most" shops don't use and or fill the pits they have. Kansas may allow you to have a pit in a commercial setting or perhaps on a farm, I doubt any municipality would approve one in a residence.
Steve
I have one. Made it safe as I could. Exhaust/fresh air /phone/ carpet/ and wall beer pockets too. Exhaust system is on anytime I'm in the pit with lights on-which is always. A real summertime bonus is its real cool in the summer! Have other lifts too. I use em all.
Wow! Nice garage. That's what I want when I grow up.
That is what a pit lift is for...I always felt comfortable in a pit changing a clutch pits are nice, only limit is suspension work when the car needs to be lifted by the frame.
Also to be OSHA legal you must have explosion proof lighting. My buddy looked into this. He said one light fixture was over $1000.

Every oil change place I have seen uses pits.
I have never seen one at a tire place.
What kind of work do you do to most?
Also to be OSHA legal you must have explosion proof lighting. My buddy looked into this. He said one light fixture was over $1000.
The NEC classifies pits in commercial garages as hazardous areas, but as far as I can tell there's nothing in there that applies to home garages. Still, I wouldn't do one without proper ventilation and wiring techniques.
The place we rented when we lived in Iceland had a pit in the garage. It was a bit primitive, but had fluorescent lighting and was a good size. I actually prefered it over the lift many times as I could roll the vehicle back and forth when working on driveline/suspension. Other times when I had to run back and forth, it was more convenient and quicker for me to jump out of the pit and into the vehicle than to wait for the lift to go up and down.
The down side was when the vehicle was coated with snow/ice and water would down onto the pit floor which was a mixture of dirt and gravel.
I wouldn't mind having one again, but my priority for the new garage is a lift.
More so because it's getting harder to lug my fat @$$ around![]()
Hoists let you get the weight off the tires so you can swap them etc.
They also let you get to the center line stuff.
So they allow more flexability to do more different things.
But they take up room, require high headroom, are expensive, and need some maintance.
I have one that I put in when I built the garage 30+ years ago and use it for a variety of auto repair jobs on my cars and trucks. When not in use I cover it with timber planks cut to fit into the recessed area of the floor so I don't loose any floor space. Never fell in and haven't blown myself up because of gasoline fumes.![]()
The plywood in the pic is a shelf I use to cover a portion of the opening to lay tools on when I am working. I have spilled some oil in it over the years but I keep it cleaned up and vac'd out when I have finished using it. I'm glad I built it.
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