Ok we are closing shortly on a new house in Texas and it has a great detached workshop with plenty of space and 14 foot cielings so I would like to install a lift. I have narrowed it down to a two post so I can do suspension work and pull tires and wheels easily when needed.
The lift will need to be able to handle everthing between my 93 Jeep wrangler to my F150 supercrew and I would like to have the ability to lift an F350 diesel crewcab as well in case I upgrade the pickup at some point in the future. I am leaning toward a 10k lift capacity for that reason.
I have been doing some research online and read a lot of forum postings here and other sites but I still don't feel like I have made much progress as many seem to contradict each other. The previous Owner of the house had a two post in the shop which he took with him so I know the floor should be able to handle the stresses but I am also in contact with the builder so I can check with him on floor specs of the particular model I choose before pulling the trigger.
I have heard good things about Bend Pack and been told that Mohawk is the "cadillac" of lifts and I should go that route by a few people but I am not sure if that's overkill.
Do I go with asymmetic or symmetric? Another concern is I have a very low slung car that I want to be able to lift as well so the lift needs to accommodate that as well.
The Mohawk will probably cost about double (or more) what a bendpack or something similar will, but in my research it does seem that are more stable (wider footprint) and generally safer, and I do really wonder the merits of saving some money if I am going to be standing under this thing with several thousand pounds hanging over my head.
If you read the manufacturers literature on any of these lifts they all make the competiton sound like death traps too!
I am not a master mechanic by any means but with a job change and some more free time I am thinking there are a few potential future projects that I would like to tackle over the next few years and a lift will make them much easier. I also figure this is a buy it once kind of tool and every time I have gone with a cheaper tool because I thought I might be overdoing it I have regretted it later.
Would appreciate any suggestions those in the know might have.
thanks
The lift will need to be able to handle everthing between my 93 Jeep wrangler to my F150 supercrew and I would like to have the ability to lift an F350 diesel crewcab as well in case I upgrade the pickup at some point in the future. I am leaning toward a 10k lift capacity for that reason.
I have been doing some research online and read a lot of forum postings here and other sites but I still don't feel like I have made much progress as many seem to contradict each other. The previous Owner of the house had a two post in the shop which he took with him so I know the floor should be able to handle the stresses but I am also in contact with the builder so I can check with him on floor specs of the particular model I choose before pulling the trigger.
I have heard good things about Bend Pack and been told that Mohawk is the "cadillac" of lifts and I should go that route by a few people but I am not sure if that's overkill.
Do I go with asymmetic or symmetric? Another concern is I have a very low slung car that I want to be able to lift as well so the lift needs to accommodate that as well.
The Mohawk will probably cost about double (or more) what a bendpack or something similar will, but in my research it does seem that are more stable (wider footprint) and generally safer, and I do really wonder the merits of saving some money if I am going to be standing under this thing with several thousand pounds hanging over my head.
If you read the manufacturers literature on any of these lifts they all make the competiton sound like death traps too!I am not a master mechanic by any means but with a job change and some more free time I am thinking there are a few potential future projects that I would like to tackle over the next few years and a lift will make them much easier. I also figure this is a buy it once kind of tool and every time I have gone with a cheaper tool because I thought I might be overdoing it I have regretted it later.
Would appreciate any suggestions those in the know might have.
thanks