jmiller_2308
Well-known member
Short question:
Can I replace the manual pump on my manual jack with fittings to allow me to connect an air/hydraulic pump to it so that I can convert the whole thing to an air/hydraulic jack?
Background:
The jack is on my Harbor Freight motorcycle lift and is essentially a specialized single acting bottle jack. Yes, I've read all kinds of articles about people modifying this lift for air/hydraulic but none of them seem to use the existing jack. The mounting, length, etc. of the jack are such that I'd prefer to be able to use the existing jack and not have to go through the effort of fabricating and installing something new.
After reading and looking at specs it seems as though a 10 ton (10,000 psi) air/hydraulic pump would be a good match for the bottle jack. I have seen one conversion where there person applied such a pump by modifying the existing jack to accept the output of the air/hydraulic pump as per my short question above. However, in that modification they also ended up discarding the original jack's jacket (the reservoir) and plugging various ports. He didn't provide any real description of which ports to block so I'm at a bit of a loss as to how I might modify my jack similarly.
So after contemplating which ports I might need to block I started wondering if I could just modify my jack to replace the plunger with fittings to accept the output from an air/hydraulic pump but leave the current jack's reservoir in tact such that no port plugging would be necessary. It seems to me that as long as both the reservoir in the air/hydraulic pump and the lift jack are full that it should "just work". What am I missing?
This is what the current pump looks like and it. The longer rod is the manual pump and the shorter rod is for a release. I could continue to use this release or I also believe that the air/pump could operate in reverse to bring the lift down.

For reference, here are the types of air/hydraulic pump I'm considering:

or

Can I replace the manual pump on my manual jack with fittings to allow me to connect an air/hydraulic pump to it so that I can convert the whole thing to an air/hydraulic jack?
Background:
The jack is on my Harbor Freight motorcycle lift and is essentially a specialized single acting bottle jack. Yes, I've read all kinds of articles about people modifying this lift for air/hydraulic but none of them seem to use the existing jack. The mounting, length, etc. of the jack are such that I'd prefer to be able to use the existing jack and not have to go through the effort of fabricating and installing something new.
After reading and looking at specs it seems as though a 10 ton (10,000 psi) air/hydraulic pump would be a good match for the bottle jack. I have seen one conversion where there person applied such a pump by modifying the existing jack to accept the output of the air/hydraulic pump as per my short question above. However, in that modification they also ended up discarding the original jack's jacket (the reservoir) and plugging various ports. He didn't provide any real description of which ports to block so I'm at a bit of a loss as to how I might modify my jack similarly.
So after contemplating which ports I might need to block I started wondering if I could just modify my jack to replace the plunger with fittings to accept the output from an air/hydraulic pump but leave the current jack's reservoir in tact such that no port plugging would be necessary. It seems to me that as long as both the reservoir in the air/hydraulic pump and the lift jack are full that it should "just work". What am I missing?
This is what the current pump looks like and it. The longer rod is the manual pump and the shorter rod is for a release. I could continue to use this release or I also believe that the air/pump could operate in reverse to bring the lift down.

For reference, here are the types of air/hydraulic pump I'm considering:

or








