omowright
Well-known member
Has anyone lifted a vehicle completely off a 4-post lift on rolling/sliding jacks?
What are the advantages of one over the other?
What are the advantages of one over the other?
Ya but what's your question. If you're asking the difference between using a four post verses a two post that's like asking who makes the best ratchet.
Yes, we used to do it all the time.
One advantage of a 4 post is that you can easily set it up for wheel alignments, but this is not something a typical DIYer is going to do. A 4 post with 2 jacking beams is also nice for suspension work since you can set the car down on the ramps to tighten the suspension bushings. The ramps also give you a nice work surface.
A two-post gives you full clearance around the wheels and is generally preferred for tire rotation and things like exhaust work where you need full access to the underside.
Most shops had at least one of each.
The sliding jack slides along the two ramps of the 4-post, the lifting jacks being accross so that only an end of the car can be lifted. I don't know much about the rolling jack but suspect it can lift off one side of the car as well. Hence the question. If I should have only one type, which?
i have 1 rolling jack and i custom made a sliding beam from a heavy trailer hitch receiver. I cut and welded the receiver to fit the rails of my bendpak hd9
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Has anyone lifted a vehicle completely off a 4-post lift on rolling/sliding jacks?
What are the advantages of one over the other?
I am in the process of ordering my HD-9. However, I really can't believe the RJ-45 rolling jack is almost half the price of the lift! I totally get (and need) the functionality though. The Atlas RJ-45 (interesting that it shares the same model number as the Bendpak) looks like it would work on the Bendpak lift. It even has adjustable brackets. And at $400 less, I can live without the air function. Can anyone here confirm that the Atlas model will really work on the Bendpak lift?
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Yup, lifted everything from compacts to class A motorhomes that way for various reasons. That said, it is no substitute for a 2 post lift, the 4 post gets in the way of most work you want a lift for.
I'm on the other fence here... I have never once at work wished I had a 2 post instead of my 4 post to do any of the work I have done... and I'm a full time mechanic....Yup, lifted everything from compacts to class A motorhomes that way for various reasons. That said, it is no substitute for a 2 post lift, the 4 post gets in the way of most work you want a lift for.
I'm on the other fence here... I have never once at work wished I had a 2 post instead of my 4 post to do any of the work I have done... and I'm a full time mechanic....
sent from what use to be a great country...
The whole subject is so subjective, ya might as well argue is the sky blue. For the kind of work I do the 4 poster is the only way to go. It's only a hand full of times a two post would have been my preference as in dropping a subframe as a complete package. And to compensate for that I built some cantilever extensions to support the body so I can pull that off.
LOL.....4 post with bridge jack for me! And you can tell that the sky is clear from pictures of the earth during the day from space.
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