I've had this problem before when changing a transmission while the
car was on stands. What I did was to use a scissors jack sitting on
top of blocks of wood. I think that the block of wood that you used
shifted as the car was raised since the contact surface with the wood
was no longer level with respect to the wood. If you place the wood
under the jack, it shouldn't slip. Just the same, don't get under
the car without the stands firmly in place!
Jim
Chris Heerschap wrote:
>
> I have the basic 2 ton heavy duty floor jack I use for working on my
> car.
>
> The problem I have is that I put it up to the highest setting, then
> get it on jackstands, and there's not quite enough room to work.
>
> I used to use a block of wood between the jack and the car (painful
> cringes from the audience) until the wood slipped and cracked open my
> radiator. Some lessons have to be learned painfully.
>
> Anyhow, I'd sure like to get more height under the car. My jackstands
> are only up to the second or third setting at most, and if I'm on a
> creeper, space is next to nonexistant. I can work, but it'd sure be
> nice to have more space.
>
> And no, the garage is too small (as is the budget) for a nice lift.
>
> Any suggestions... aside from getting a new jack? I know some of the
> long-frame jacks lift quite high, but storage space is also at a
> premium in the garage.
>
> cmh
> --
> Chris Heerschap mailto:heerschap@eng.kns.com
> UNIX Systems Mutilator (215) 784-6048
--
James A. Babcock, Software Engineer email: james.a.babcock@adn.alcatel.com
Alcatel WWW: http://www.usa.alcatel.com
Ashburn, Virginia USA phone: +1 703 724 2762
"Make things as simple as possible, but no simpler" -- A. Einstein
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