Incase anyone has harbor freight jack stands, there is a safety recall on certain ones. CLICK HERE FOR RECALL NOTICE
Never had an issue with mine. Jackstands are very basic tools. HF or not.Buy once, cry once.
Buy junk from HF, no one will hear you cry.
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Ray, don't be a stranger.......I once witnessed a 46,000 lb aircraft tug at LAX supported at one end by two 6-ton HF jack stands. The feet were pressed at least two inches into the asphalt. I asked the mechanic who was changing the immense tires and he said they "never get under the tugs." Good safety tip. He also said they had never had a failure.
Must be the same ramps I bought and my M9 squashed. Really wimpy. Thought about returning them but wondered if they would give me a refund for flat ramps... I'm pretty sure I took them over the design limits.HF tools can be good or bad. I have a $14 grinder that has lasted just as long as the $75 Makita.
I bought a pair of 13,000 pound ramps to lift the front of my GMC dually pickup for oil changes, 4,500 pounds. A safety factor of 3. I should have been good and safe. NOT! The first and the second pair broke on their first try. 4x4 low range so I could ease up on the ramp.
I went old school 2-2x12s with 4x4s screwed between them. Heavy as all get out but I do not worry about being under the truck.
First off, jack stands don't have wheels and secondly, the ram and teeth are cast not machined at all.The recalled stands have a design flaw in the teeth of the portion that raises and lowers. The teeth are not cut deep enough on the recalled jacks therefor the latch may not fully engage causing the jack to drop under load or if there is a weight shift such as lowering a load supported by a hydraulic jack onto a jack stand where the potential lateral load shift occurs as the jacks wheels roll as it unloads. I wouldn’t use them for anything. The teeth appear to be about 18 of an inch deep. Nowhere near deep enough for 3 or 6 tons.
First, they weren't talking about the jack stands having wheels. They were talking about the jack being used to lift the vehicle onto the stands having wheels. So the potential lateral movement from that jack lowering then loading the compromised Jack Stands.First off, jack stands don't have wheels and secondly, the ram and teeth are cast not machined at all.
Finally, considering the retail markup on them, I bet HF pays about 2 bucks each including shipping from China.
I own 4 sets of them in the 6 ton flavor. Never had an issue.
uh oh, you may piss him off and he doesnt take that very well.Sidecar,
I did. Here I rebolded the second part to include the full context. They are talking about a rolling floor jack and not a bottle jack. So you can beg all you want.
If there is a weight shift such as lowering a load supported by a hydraulic jack onto a jack stand where the potential lateral load shift occurs as the jacks wheels roll as it unloads.
Notice how they used "jacks" (should have been jack's but this isn't about grammar this is about comprehension) and not "jack stands".
Again, the First part was for visualization. They were using cut as a descriptor verb of the teeth size and depth not as a description of how the part was built. They in no part mentioned the actual manufacturing process and taking what they said literally is a misinterpretation.
If you want to get technical on it they do have to cut the casting mold and/or machine the original part which the mold is then formed around. Instead of reading to reply try reading to understand a lot of these mistakes would have sorted themselves out.