So I decided to rotate tires today. No big deal, grab the floor jack, stands and impact and get after it. Then I thought, why not see what's involved in changing a tire using the OEM tools.
So first, I place the jack in the indicated position, and begin to use the handle connected to the lug wrench to raise the truck. Whoever invented this mickey mouse setup needs to be shot. Oh, and I checked the rating on the jack 3087 pounds. Not kilos. I wouldn't lift a 60's MG with a jack that light.
Okay I finally, it takes a long time turning that lug wrench to get the vehicle up, have it lifted and go after the lugnuts. Plan on another long frustrating session before there off, IF you can break the lugnuts loose without standing on the end of the wrench. Heck, even standing on it I had to bounce up and down (a human impact gun).
Conclusion, total fail with the supplied tools.
Now, I keep a battery powered impact in all of my vehicles, but batteries die so I keep the lug wrench in there as well. I looked at the jack handle and figured out with the right adapter I could drive it with the impact. It works, but talk about wobbly, and that was lowering it.
Then I thought about lowering the spare. Using the same supplied tools it's a pain. The impact made that much easier. So it seems the entire package of tools will stay just so I can lower the spare.
After these little experiments, I used the right tools and rotated the tires in less time than jacking, removing lugnuts for one tire and lowering and raising the spare.
Conclusion, replace the jack. I had already been thinking about it, but this pretty well cemented the idea. Possible candadates are a good 5 ton hydraulic bottle jack, off road floor jack or an electric jack. Each has it's issues. Bottle jack can leak oil, the off road floor jack are massive and the electric jack that looks best is a sissor jack which usually have a small footing.
Does anyone have any other suggestions?
So first, I place the jack in the indicated position, and begin to use the handle connected to the lug wrench to raise the truck. Whoever invented this mickey mouse setup needs to be shot. Oh, and I checked the rating on the jack 3087 pounds. Not kilos. I wouldn't lift a 60's MG with a jack that light.
Okay I finally, it takes a long time turning that lug wrench to get the vehicle up, have it lifted and go after the lugnuts. Plan on another long frustrating session before there off, IF you can break the lugnuts loose without standing on the end of the wrench. Heck, even standing on it I had to bounce up and down (a human impact gun).
Conclusion, total fail with the supplied tools.
Now, I keep a battery powered impact in all of my vehicles, but batteries die so I keep the lug wrench in there as well. I looked at the jack handle and figured out with the right adapter I could drive it with the impact. It works, but talk about wobbly, and that was lowering it.
Then I thought about lowering the spare. Using the same supplied tools it's a pain. The impact made that much easier. So it seems the entire package of tools will stay just so I can lower the spare.
After these little experiments, I used the right tools and rotated the tires in less time than jacking, removing lugnuts for one tire and lowering and raising the spare.
Conclusion, replace the jack. I had already been thinking about it, but this pretty well cemented the idea. Possible candadates are a good 5 ton hydraulic bottle jack, off road floor jack or an electric jack. Each has it's issues. Bottle jack can leak oil, the off road floor jack are massive and the electric jack that looks best is a sissor jack which usually have a small footing.
Does anyone have any other suggestions?