Tiwaz
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Yes. It will shift off to the side even if it is in park and brakes locked. The farm jack just doesn't have any sideways stability, so it shifts sideways, not forward or backwards.thanks for the suggestion, I do have one of those bottle jack as well but unfortunately i found out (when I really needed it) that it is good only as long as the tire is inflated, if you punch a tire the whole truck will loose enough clearance that the bottle will not fit any longer, that is why I was thinking about purchasing a farm jack.
Are you saying that the truck will slide even if you have it in P and emergency brake pulled....?
Lifting both wheels on ether end will likely result in the jack/jacks shifting and dropping the load before you could get the jack stands under it.'Aint a darn thing wrong with a good old High-lift! Just don't be stupid with it. Lifting all 4 wheels off the ground at the same time with only Highlifts would fall into that category. I would lift one end, toss jack stands under it then lift the other end. Only then would I take off any wheels
I use the d-rings on my Jeeps as lift points. I like it better than on the bumper since it doesn't slide off. WIth rings that pivot in the rear the jack should stay upright even better.
If the suspension droops out before you have the wheel off the ground, try tossing a chain or strap under the suspension to prevent it from drooping out.
And for all the good comments...Make darn sure the jack base has a darn good footing / base to earth connection. Side to side are worry point ... and I add front to back of pick point. When it GOES forward / backwards the top of lifting beam / post will take out your tail light, fender, grill, hand ??? making for bad words. If it doesn't look right, feel right... think it through to the what if's and jack stands.
Going straight up and straight down, CAMO
EDIT after thinking about it.And for all the good comments...Make darn sure the jack base has a darn good footing / base to earth connection. Side to side are worry point ... and I add front to back of pick point. When it GOES forward / backwards the top of lifting beam / post will take out your tail light, fender, grill, hand ??? making for bad words. If it doesn't look right, feel right... think it through to the what if's and jack stands.
Going straight up and straight down, CAMO![]()
And to add ..."what can go wrong".... Letting in down. Stay it total control, HANDS on the jacking lever and be prepared for the lever to return weighted energy every little click, walking it down. DON'T let go and get beat to death with the handle. Know how the up-down selector works. Just my thoughts.
Click one, click two, click three. CAMO![]()
Rarely do I ever use it for a JACK mostly a "Winch" or just a tool to lift or lower an item like a bumper into alignment for bolts or something. But it works fine for a Jack as long as you are smarter then the object you are working with. Make sure you use all the movement of the handle never half strokes and take care to CONTROL the handle... Make sure it is on solid footing... like old Bumper Jacks it is what it is. USUALLY having "Keyholes" for the Hi Lift to interface with helps but is not necessary. bigger issue is finding a way to carry it!Hi lift jacks are absurdly dangerous (I carry one though). Bottle jack or if you want to hunt one down a Bogert hydraulic HMMWV jack. I carry a Bogert off road. Great jack but takes up a lot of room.
Also you should throw a set of Harbor Freight tire chocks in the bed for any tire changing.
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