![IMG_0414.JPG IMG_0414.JPG](https://www.tahoeyukonforum.com/data/attachments/232/232971-44d354291bdef79698b2ce7cbf04a609.jpg)
https://www.bendpak.com/car-lifts/portable-car-lifts/bl-7000slx/
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Gotta love how they mix the spec formats, in decimal and fractions. Why not just list the length as 1-5/8? Or the diameter as 0.375?
View attachment 237815
That also reminds me of seeing a toll road sign displaying the cost of .75 cents. I've been overcharged all this time?
View attachment 237824 May have to go with something like this and get all the tall adapters I can to safely go higher. I have the complete building blue prints for the whole facility and I take this footnote to mean that the 3000 psi rating is for the concrete floor of where I live and the outside concrete rating of 2500 psi is in my carport area and therefore would not support the Max Jax. Hence the questions about the creepers and this portable lift set up.
https://www.bendpak.com/car-lifts/portable-car-lifts/bl-7000slx/
Bummer on the 2500 psi concrete. Although, the concrete contractor may have poured the same 3000 psi stuff as for the slab. I believe those are just minimum figures the engineer has to spec and it seems one would have to go out of their way for a 500 psi savings. But, I'm no expert. It's worth investigating if the place isn't very old and if the contractor can be reached.
One thing about that Quickjack is you gotta be able to move the halves of that lift around on the ground.
This honie manages it just fine, she just had to put dat ass into it:
The 3000 psi requirement isn’t necessarily for load bearing, it’s for holding power of the bolt anchors.Yea, I still have to check with the owner's son and his brother about the concrete. Plus, the Tahoe is about 5000 pounds and if you equate it out that may be fine if the 2500 psi is fine for that weight. It may stand to reason that the spec of minimum 3000 psi is because they equate that out for the 6000 pound lift capacity. I see a double this number and it pencils out. Or to the other extreme, if you half the lift capacity that is the concrete psi spec to shoot for.
Now, about that Honie and the QuickJack. I would want to get some more extensions but I know there has to be a limit. The biggest thing is that it is clear under the middle of the truck/Tahoe. Hence the creeper questions in my other post.
She would be sexier in shop coveralls though. Especially if she stopped saying, "LIKE" all the time.
Yea, I still have to check with the owner's son and his brother about the concrete. Plus, the Tahoe is about 5000 pounds and if you equate it out that may be fine if the 2500 psi is fine for that weight. It may stand to reason that the spec of minimum 3000 psi is because they equate that out for the 6000 pound lift capacity. I see a double this number and it pencils out. Or to the other extreme, if you half the lift capacity that is the concrete psi spec to shoot for.
Now, about that Honie and the QuickJack. I would want to get some more extensions but I know there has to be a limit. The biggest thing is that it is clear under the middle of the truck/Tahoe. Hence the creeper questions in my other post.
She would be sexier in shop coveralls though. Especially if she stopped saying, "LIKE" all the time.
I am going to go with this set up
https://www.quickjack.com/car-lifts/bl-7000slx/
With this extension kit:
https://www.quickjack.com/slx-frame-extensions/
With this adaptor kit:
https://www.quickjack.com/suv-truck-adapter-kit/
It is all free delivery.
I was going to have to be on a creeper of some sort anyway with the Max Jax