Lift in Garage - Any Advice?
#11
Thread Starter
Any garage door company can modify your tracks to go up to and run along the ceiling. If your ceiling is high enough, it will mostly sit in the front wall above the door opening. You will want a jack shaft opener. There aren’t a lot of options; most use the Liftmaster 8500.
#12
Thread Starter
I found out that I have 12' ceiling in the garage; not 14'. Seems so high up I just thought it was 14'. Waiting for an electrician to install an outlet for the side mounted garage motor.
#13
Not to go off topic, but has anyone looked into an in ground scissor lift? Something like this?
I've been thinking about one of these and I like that it's unobtrusive when down, whereas a 2 post normal lift takes up quite a bit of space.. A friend has one at his shop and he has no complaints..
I've been thinking about one of these and I like that it's unobtrusive when down, whereas a 2 post normal lift takes up quite a bit of space.. A friend has one at his shop and he has no complaints..
#14
Thread Starter
Not to go off topic, but has anyone looked into an in ground scissor lift? Something like this?
I've been thinking about one of these and I like that it's unobtrusive when down, whereas a 2 post normal lift takes up quite a bit of space.. A friend has one at his shop and he has no complaints..
I've been thinking about one of these and I like that it's unobtrusive when down, whereas a 2 post normal lift takes up quite a bit of space.. A friend has one at his shop and he has no complaints..
#15
Seems like QuickJacks are the ones most go to: https://www.quickjack.com/
#16
Thread Starter
#17
Not to go off topic, but has anyone looked into an in ground scissor lift? Something like this?
I've been thinking about one of these and I like that it's unobtrusive when down, whereas a 2 post normal lift takes up quite a bit of space.. A friend has one at his shop and he has no complaints..
I've been thinking about one of these and I like that it's unobtrusive when down, whereas a 2 post normal lift takes up quite a bit of space.. A friend has one at his shop and he has no complaints..
#18
#19
I would think it depends on what type of work you mainly want to do. Sure scissor lifts take up less room, especially this one that flushes up with the floor, however the downside is the limit in travel as well as how much of the underside of the car the scissor lift blocks. If you are mainly doing suspension work or taking wheels on and off, a scissor lift might work best. But if you are doing things like dropping engines and subframes from underneath the car, then a scissor lift will be a hindrance at best. It is not adjustable front to back or side to side for different sized vehicles and won't allow you to walk upright underneath the car either.
#20
For sure, it all depends. The "trick" is spacing the two sides correctly so that you can lift cars and not have the sides protruding under the car. It doesn't restrict under car access much at all. You can walk underneath the car easily, just not from the side obviously. I don't think dropping the engine/tranny would be a problem at all (on the one I saw and walked under). The thing that I really like about these is their compact size when not in use. In home 2 car garages a 2 post lift will either be close to a wall or in the middle of the 2 car garage, and be a hinderance either way when parking 2 cars. These are virtually invisible when not in use. If you look at the jack points there's plenty of room underneath the car.