The reason it will have 10' ceilings is the garage will be attached to the house. so its for asthetic reasons. I only ever wrench on my own stuff and my friends. I own a lifted jeep on 38's and a F-350. But i am limited to the 10 ft ceiling height. I was hoping to do 14' or even 12' but it wont look right.
the in ground looks nice but im sure its out my price range. thanks for all of the ideas and keep them coming
I have done alot of research on this since I was considering buying a 2 post lift for my shop that I am fixing up. It is an existing structure, alot of the area has a 12' ceiling, but the that would give the easiest access to the lift only has 10'4" ceiliings. For a 2 post that will work with 10' ceilings you are going to be limited to a baseplate style lift. I think the highest capacity baseplate lift available is 9000lbs. Especially if it is a newer F-350 it is going to be pushing the capacity, you are going to have to have the weight distributed perfectly.
If it was a commercial shop, I would say don't bother with a lift unless you have 12' ceilings or higher. Since it probably won't be used daily, you can still have a functional lift with 10' ceilings. I have an 04 and 09 F150, they are both 4x4 and stock height. They are 76" tall, doing quick math you would think the max lift height is 44". However, both trucks have 20" of ground clearance, so the majority of the vehicle will be 5'6" off the floor. You will have to be very careful about raising it without hitting the ceiling. You will also have to remove antennas before lifting most vehicles to get extra height. Also, make sure you use recessed lighting over the lift area, when you are dealing with 10' ceilings, a couple of inches becomes very significant.
I would definitely check into having the trusses modified if you were dead set on 10' ceilings, like others have suggested. Going to 12' ceilings would probably be a good compromise between look and function. You are probably getting sick of people telling you that, but there are good reasons. Honestly, when it is all said and done I think you would regret doing 10' ceilings much more than regretting the look of a garage that is 2' higher. If you are using an architect try to get some sketches with 10' and 12' ceilings so you can visualize it easier before settling in on a decision.