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-   -   Question for those with home car lift or quick jack (https://landroverforums.com/forum/discovery-ii-18/question-those-home-car-lift-quick-jack-93423/)

Gonow 02-10-2019 09:55 AM

Question for those with home car lift or quick jack
 

https://cimg7.ibsrv.net/gimg/landrov...a1b94d5180.png
I’ve been thinking about getting a Quickjack and when I looked under the truck to take some measurements I noticed that the ladder frame rails are some distance away from the rocker panels. Access to them is also sometimes blocked by the front/rear radius arms. Not only that, but the various brackets and mounting points protrude downward from the frame rail.

For those of you with a car lift or quick jack, where do you lift from? The manual says to use axels or frame, but I imagine the radius arms get in the way no? Is it OK to lift by the radius arms? I noticed that being done in some Atlantic British videos.

Saturnine 02-10-2019 10:03 AM

I jack mine up via the shock mounting points in the axles and then jack stands in the notch of the radious app :dunno:

escott16 02-10-2019 04:14 PM

https://cimg5.ibsrv.net/gimg/landrov...e556f8d45.jpeg
https://cimg6.ibsrv.net/gimg/landrov...ba00212c4.jpeg

Gonow 02-10-2019 10:59 PM

Thank you! Btw your undercarriage is immaculate. 👍

myD2HSE 02-11-2019 11:21 AM

I don't at the moment have an undercarriage view showing the lift points, but I am using the point where the control arms attach to the frame. Not sure what lift eScott has but I like his high lift adapter more so than what I have on my TwinBusch lift. The collar under his pad looks sturdy.

https://cimg3.ibsrv.net/gimg/landrov...673046306d.jpg

Llamasayswhat 02-11-2019 01:08 PM

The problem is if you use the frame or even the suspension points, it puts the lift arms pretty far in towards the center of the car, and it is not very stable.

The best support spot as shown in the photos from escott16, is the point where the body and frame bolt together. You need a block of wood or rubber pads to lift there though, and it takes a bit of feel/getting used to as the front one has a funky angle as the bracket goes back into the center of the car.

escott16 02-11-2019 01:17 PM

Mine is extreamly stable I’ve jumped up into the car , shook it , it’s not going anywhere , and I use wood just so I don’t wear out the rubber plates on my lift

myD2HSE 02-11-2019 03:03 PM


Originally Posted by Llamasayswhat (Post 680102)
The problem is if you use the frame or even the suspension points, it puts the lift arms pretty far in towards the center of the car, and it is not very stable..

RE stability, I use two 20 ton jack stands. One in the front another in the rear opposite sides. It has been pretty solid for me. While I see where eScott jacks it up, I would not have thought to lift there initially as I would hate to have the body panel fold due to the trucks weight.

escott16 02-11-2019 03:04 PM

No damages , I’ve had it on a lift probably 10+ times sometimes days at a time

Llamasayswhat 02-11-2019 05:23 PM


Originally Posted by myD2HSE (Post 680116)
RE stability, I use two 20 ton jack stands. One in the front another in the rear opposite sides. It has been pretty solid for me. While I see where eScott jacks it up, I would not have thought to lift there initially as I would hate to have the body panel fold due to the trucks weight.


The question was about using a lift, not jacks and stands. Jacks and stands would be fine there, but the nature of lifts with the single mount point for the lift arms makes it sketchy and unstable at best unless you use the outer points at the body mount like escott uses.

We lift all the discos in our shop at that point


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