I just wanted to report that I've had a temporary work stoppage due to a couple of things. One was an unfortunate encounter with a weed eater string that was spinning away. It whacked my right hand on the back side in about thirty places. Well, that's all healed up, but I came down with shingles over the last several days (second time in 8 years ... a real bummer). This time we caught it much earlier and the doctor started me on an anti-viral, a pain killer for nerve endings and some prednisone (steroid) to reduce inflammation. I'm already feeling a little better, but shingles is a bad deal (adult recurrence of chickenpox with terrible shooting pain). There is a vaccine that you can take to prevent it, but there is some question as to whether or not it's a 100% prevention. Once I'm better, I do plan to take the shot, BTW. I'd advise this vaccine for any of you who are over 60 who have had chickenpox and for anyone who's never had chicken pox.
Now as to the progress that I've made in the last several weeks. I do have the complete hydraulic power unit reassembled and I've cleaned and straightened the threads on all of the fasteners. Cleaned rust off all shafts, too. Next, I'll temporally reassemble the jack and check the operation, any leak down issues, etc., using my 3/4 Ton, 4X4 Yukon XL as a test load. If all is good, I'll take the jack to my local jack repair place and have them load test it and be sure that the overload relief is set at a reasonable point. I figure that 10,000 pounds is reasonable to protect the jack structurally and give some reserve for the future in case the overload setting decays a bit over the years.