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  • Obioban
    replied
    Originally posted by eacmen View Post

    Am i the only one trying to figure out what’s going on with the scales and graduated cylinder in that photo?

    Are you lowering the car onto sclaes using the quickjack for the corner balance?

    Is the graduated cylinder meant to be some kind of water level?
    Yes and yes

    Leave a comment:


  • eacmen
    replied
    Originally posted by Obioban View Post
    Was just doing an alignment/corner balance, and loving the quick jack/4 post combo.

    Click image for larger version

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    Am i the only one trying to figure out what’s going on with the scales and graduated cylinder in that photo?

    Are you lowering the car onto sclaes using the quickjack for the corner balance?

    Is the graduated cylinder meant to be some kind of water level?

    Leave a comment:


  • Cubieman
    replied
    I am still trying to plan dropping the rear end as one unit on the 4 post lift, the rear posts/horizontal bar may get in the way of getting the rear end out from under the vehicle.

    Leave a comment:


  • bigjae46
    replied
    A 4 post lift is for storage. Once you bang your head on the ramps...you'll wish you got that 2 post.

    Buy the 2 post if you plan on ever disassembling the car. For a 2 post lift, you have to follow the manufacturers guideline for concrete strength. Might have to install sonotubes if the garage floor isn't thick enough or strong enough (I think you need something like a 5k pour). You can certainly store a car under a 2 post if you have enough ceiling height. Also need to factor in the need to raise the garage door.

    For anything wheels on, I'd just use hub stands. I've also seen a shop use 4 rollable stands where you level the stands and lower the car on top. Kind of a pain but if you're doing alignments then hub stands makes life the easiest.

    I have access to 2 post and 4 post lifts. The only task I do on a 4 post is alignments (its a Hunter alignment rack). I'd rather drive the car onto ramps and do a string alignment. But the Hunter machine makes it so easy and I can get the alignment done in about 15 - 20 minutes. Although a string alignment is far superior. The roller jacks severely limit access. I could put the car onto jack stands but I'd have the car up and underbdody panels off on a 2 post before I even start on a 4 post. Also, much darker under the car with a 4 post.

    2 post lifts...I can roll a cart underneath with tools and parts. No need to walk back and forth...far easier. And less likely to hit my head.

    But 2 posts do require regular maintenance and inspections even if only used infrequently. A failure will not be good. A 4 post is much safer. Most of us hobbyist work alone so something to consider as well.
    Last edited by bigjae46; 05-02-2021, 09:08 AM.

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  • GS-skiracer
    replied
    Okay, guys, help me out with the math here. I'm hoping those of you with a lift might chime in.

    I have a 10-2 foot-high ceiling in my garage. I want to install a four-post lift (Rotary Revolution RFP8).
    From what I've read online, there are quite a number of people installing lifts with only 10 feet or so of clearance and making it work.

    I need to stack up an E36 M3 and an E46 M3 for storage.

    Car on top - E36 M3: 52 inches height (lowered).
    Ramp height: 4.5 inches.
    Car on the bottom - E46 M3: 54 inches height.
    Clearance between bottom car and ramps overhead: I figure 6 inches to be on the safe side.
    Total: 116.5

    That leaves 5.5 inches of clearance between the top car and the ceiling.
    I don't see how that can realistically work given the usual 4-inch spacing between the catches and having to go up a bit to release them,
    unless you leave 2 inches of clearance between the bottom car and the overhead ramps. Is that feasible?

    If someone is making it work with ~10 feet, I'd like to hear how it's possible. Thanks!
    Last edited by GS-skiracer; 05-02-2021, 08:36 AM.

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  • umichchris
    replied
    Originally posted by nuc1 View Post

    You must live in the garage. That’s insane.

    Mike
    honestly, the E46 is pretty solid. i took about 9 months and went through everything in that car starting with a leaky rear diff and torn CSB pretty much and fell down that "while im in there" rabbit hole but its pretty solid.

    the E39 has been rock solid, only needing front suspension components, cooling system revamp, SAP issues, smog issues....but i got that sorted. just needs the rear diff seals done now.

    the range rovers just need some pullies, both need fresh air bags and compressors, not too bad of a job once you've got it going.

    the fu*king problem child is the E60 though. ive had that thing for 10 years and its honestly the worst car ive ever owned. im not sure there's a worse BMW ever made.....quite literally. that bitch is under a car cover. i stopped driving it years ago because i got tired of repairing it...doesnt help that they arent worth a dime resell either. later this year though, im going to go back through it again and get her going.

    Leave a comment:


  • nuc1
    replied
    Benpak HD-9XW with RJ-45 rolling bridge jack. Worked awesome. Enough room for the Tundra, too. All in a 20x20 garage with 12.5 foot ceiling.

    Mike
    Last edited by nuc1; 04-26-2021, 05:35 AM.

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  • nuc1
    replied
    Originally posted by umichchris View Post
    its some wild ass garage goals happening within this thread lol


    back on topic, im planning on buying a 2-post lift soon. took concrete measurements and came up short on thickness, so first ive gotta rip out a patch, dig deeper and re-pour - let it all cure then install the new lift. i'm going 2-post since im planning a LS E36 build plus the enourmous amount of maintenance that comes with owning an E60 M5, E39 M5, E46 M3 and two range rovers lol
    You must live in the garage. That’s insane.

    Mike

    Leave a comment:


  • umichchris
    replied
    its some wild ass garage goals happening within this thread lol


    back on topic, im planning on buying a 2-post lift soon. took concrete measurements and came up short on thickness, so first ive gotta rip out a patch, dig deeper and re-pour - let it all cure then install the new lift. i'm going 2-post since im planning a LS E36 build plus the enourmous amount of maintenance that comes with owning an E60 M5, E39 M5, E46 M3 and two range rovers lol

    Leave a comment:


  • SpaceJockey
    replied
    Originally posted by big greasy taco View Post
    I have been pretty happy with my 4 post... planning to get a center hydraulic bridge for it this year, for wheels off service

    Skittles!

    Interesting that the most daily drivable of the bunch is on the lift.

    Edit: Also probably the least fun.

    Leave a comment:


  • 01M3Fan
    replied
    Well - glad I checked back! Had a quote on a 2 post, but maybe I’ll look at a 4 post/quick Jack combo. My ceilings are 12’+ so I have the room. Planning to pick up insulation this weekend and then get it sheet rocked. Will have to get door tracks modified and want to epoxy coat the floor before I get the lift.

    Picking up my slicktop E46 wagon tomorrow night! 5MT, heated sport seats, RWD with LSD. Then will have to go on the hunt for an M3 donor for the build.

    Leave a comment:


  • Code7rpd
    replied
    Originally posted by Obioban View Post

    Yes. It can live in the middle of the 4 post, or I can stick it vertically against the wall.
    That's awesome - thanks!

    Leave a comment:


  • Obioban
    replied
    Originally posted by Code7rpd View Post
    When you are not using the quick jack, do you just slide it off the 4 post lift out of the way?
    Yes. It can live in the middle of the 4 post, or I can stick it vertically against the wall.

    Leave a comment:


  • Code7rpd
    replied
    When you are not using the quick jack, do you just slide it off the 4 post lift out of the way?

    Leave a comment:


  • Obioban
    replied
    Was just doing an alignment/corner balance, and loving the quick jack/4 post combo.

    Click image for larger version

Name:	BB1603A0-E0D2-454D-A0D4-E0E70139AB95.jpeg
Views:	766
Size:	167.2 KB
ID:	100407

    Leave a comment:

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