Hi Chris,
Interesting comments here but I believe you made a mistake. I have a BendPak Asymmetric lift and that is the lift that BendPak states can lift in the symmetric and asymmetric configuration with their "tru-metric" arms. But then again it seems they ship all their lifts with these arms as I just saw a symmetric 10K lift with the exact same arms that I have. I have looked through the BendPak site again and the true symmetric lift talks about "lifting the heaviest loads". But all that aside Daedalus makes a great point about the twisting moment at the attachment point at the column. This can be easily overlooked. Again BendPak in this thread through Jeff states that the main point to remember is don't overload each individual arm over the 2500# rating for a 10,000# lift. In fact this is why I started this discussion in the first place. It seemed odd to me that you could put 2500# on the rear arms and 1000# on the front and that's okay. But apparently as long as you don't go over the 2500# per arm on the rear and you have a good floor then the anchors will take this load. Suffice it to say that I only load in an asymmetric fashion very light or small cars. There I may only put 1000#s on each rear arm and 500#s on each front arm and the lift has enough capacity to handle this load. But if I put anything up on the lift with any size or weight I center the load between the columns the best I can. No matter how you're looking at it you're still doing a huge balancing act with this style twin post lift..............
Lisa
Interesting comments here but I believe you made a mistake. I have a BendPak Asymmetric lift and that is the lift that BendPak states can lift in the symmetric and asymmetric configuration with their "tru-metric" arms. But then again it seems they ship all their lifts with these arms as I just saw a symmetric 10K lift with the exact same arms that I have. I have looked through the BendPak site again and the true symmetric lift talks about "lifting the heaviest loads". But all that aside Daedalus makes a great point about the twisting moment at the attachment point at the column. This can be easily overlooked. Again BendPak in this thread through Jeff states that the main point to remember is don't overload each individual arm over the 2500# rating for a 10,000# lift. In fact this is why I started this discussion in the first place. It seemed odd to me that you could put 2500# on the rear arms and 1000# on the front and that's okay. But apparently as long as you don't go over the 2500# per arm on the rear and you have a good floor then the anchors will take this load. Suffice it to say that I only load in an asymmetric fashion very light or small cars. There I may only put 1000#s on each rear arm and 500#s on each front arm and the lift has enough capacity to handle this load. But if I put anything up on the lift with any size or weight I center the load between the columns the best I can. No matter how you're looking at it you're still doing a huge balancing act with this style twin post lift..............
Lisa

I don't have time to deal with this now. I'll check back later.
****.