canuck coupe
Member
I just had a sobering experience with my Quickjack BL-5000SLX lifting my G37 sedan.
This is only the fourth time I've had the car on the Quickjack. I got it all lined up with the lift points, then raised it until the lift blocks made first contact. Went around and checked all four lift points to ensure they were well positioned. No problems identified. Then I raised the Quickjack to the first locking position and lowered it to lock. Checked the right side (locked) and was going around to check the other side when the left side jack SQUIRTED out from under the car and the left side fell to the ground! Right side still up on the jack. The jack SHOT out from under the car with its full weight on it. The front shot sideways about 4 feet until it hit my workbench. The rear followed and ended up about a foot away from the car. The Quickjack was still standing. It didn't tip over. It didn't collapse. The locking bar was locked, and the hydraulics were still connected. No leaks. Even if it had leaked, it was in the locked position. To get it to go down, I had to stand on it while my son pushed the down button on the other side of the car. So there was still plenty of hydraulic pressure in it.
If it had happened 3 seconds later, my face would have been right there checking the lift block, and it would have taken the full force. No apparent damage to the car.
There was nothing wrong with the jack itself. It was locked as intended, and showed no evidence of failure. The lifting blocks were also fine, and the grooves crushed into the blocks by the pinch weld showed that the positioning was within a quarter inch of the center (i.e. properly positioned).
It's pretty disconcerting to think that I spent a few hours under that car on that Quickjack last weekend. I will never trust it again, unless I can figure out how/why it happened. So far, I haven't managed to do that. I've read the owner's manual again, and I've Googled "Quickjack failures". No clues were forthcoming.
My only thought is that my garage floor has plastic tiles. They're pretty slippery. Sliding the Quickjacks to position them is pretty easy. But for it to squirt out from under the car with about a ton of weight on either side seems unlikely. There had to be a significant lateral force involved. But from where? With the jacks and blocks properly positioned, virtually all the force should have been vertical.
I'll have another look tomorrow. Until I figure it out, it's back to floor jack and jack stands!
If any of the engineers out there have some thoughts, I'm all ears!
This is only the fourth time I've had the car on the Quickjack. I got it all lined up with the lift points, then raised it until the lift blocks made first contact. Went around and checked all four lift points to ensure they were well positioned. No problems identified. Then I raised the Quickjack to the first locking position and lowered it to lock. Checked the right side (locked) and was going around to check the other side when the left side jack SQUIRTED out from under the car and the left side fell to the ground! Right side still up on the jack. The jack SHOT out from under the car with its full weight on it. The front shot sideways about 4 feet until it hit my workbench. The rear followed and ended up about a foot away from the car. The Quickjack was still standing. It didn't tip over. It didn't collapse. The locking bar was locked, and the hydraulics were still connected. No leaks. Even if it had leaked, it was in the locked position. To get it to go down, I had to stand on it while my son pushed the down button on the other side of the car. So there was still plenty of hydraulic pressure in it.
If it had happened 3 seconds later, my face would have been right there checking the lift block, and it would have taken the full force. No apparent damage to the car.
There was nothing wrong with the jack itself. It was locked as intended, and showed no evidence of failure. The lifting blocks were also fine, and the grooves crushed into the blocks by the pinch weld showed that the positioning was within a quarter inch of the center (i.e. properly positioned).
It's pretty disconcerting to think that I spent a few hours under that car on that Quickjack last weekend. I will never trust it again, unless I can figure out how/why it happened. So far, I haven't managed to do that. I've read the owner's manual again, and I've Googled "Quickjack failures". No clues were forthcoming.
My only thought is that my garage floor has plastic tiles. They're pretty slippery. Sliding the Quickjacks to position them is pretty easy. But for it to squirt out from under the car with about a ton of weight on either side seems unlikely. There had to be a significant lateral force involved. But from where? With the jacks and blocks properly positioned, virtually all the force should have been vertical.
I'll have another look tomorrow. Until I figure it out, it's back to floor jack and jack stands!
If any of the engineers out there have some thoughts, I'm all ears!
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