Woooo-hoooo!
Jeff at Bend-Pak has come through!
Today these showed up at my house:
I immediately got to installing them in the RJ-45. I quickly discovered that one of them was bowed outward (probably from the welding). I'm assuming Jeff didn't test fit them because there were no scratches on the paint. They probably weren't test fitted because Jeff & I had discussed him having me drill the holes for the lateral support. You can see here how bowed it was:
I could not get it to slide into the RJ-45. Jeff @ Bend-Pak was quick to suggest a solution: With my car on the lift, use the cross beam on the lift to compress the outrigger by lowering the lift! Worked perfectly.
I had to make a few tweaks to Jeff's handi-work to make it perfect:
- To lower the jack, Jeff had his guys cut down the springs that support the rollers. One of the springs is slightly shorter (or just compresses more) than the others. I simply added a thick washer (maybe 3/8") inside that wheel assembly to fix.
- The plastic strips on the sides of the new support bars just barely touch the welds on the BYB rail when there is weight on the jack. I simply used my Dremel to take about 1/8" off and bevel the bottom edge of these plastic pieces.
With these flat rollers and the plastic guide strips the jack rolls on the Backyard Buddy rails like butter. It has almost no lateral angular twist and just feels great when sliding!
The modification lowered the non-compressed height of the jack by 3/4". The weight of a vehicle would lower it just shy of 1/4" more. This is ALMOST perfect but it is as good as it is going to get without making the wheel assemblies themselves shorter; remember, the mod Jeff made was twofold: (a) shorten the springs, and (b) replace the angle support rail with a 1x1" steel bar that sits 3/4" higher than the regular angle support rail.
The "almost perfect" part is that when there is no weight on the jack, it actually could stand to be another 1/4" lower. If so then when the lift were on the ground, the jack would be on the ground too. As it is now, when the lift is on the ground, the jack is 1/4" up.
Thankfully my Porsche's tow hooks clear the jack by about 1/2" now so unless I had a lower car that additional 1/4" wouldn't make a difference.
Here are some photos showing the detail of just how well this modification works.
I took this before final adjustment of the outriggers. Now there is no visible gap between the side of the runway and the plastic strips.
Good shot showing how the outriggers now sit on the rails:
The flat rollers are perfect!
This shot from underneath shows the alignment with the rails:
How perfect is this?!?!
The final product flexing it's muscles:
Another glam shot:
Jeff @ Bend-Pak: Thank you.