© Copyright 1995 thru 2008 - The Mustang Works™. All Rights Reserved.
MustangWorks.com is designed and hosted by Aero3 Media.
MustangWorks.com is designed and hosted by Aero3 Media.
06-18-2001, 06:24 PM | #1 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Brampton, ON, Canada
Posts: 298
|
Bought jacks+stands, but driveway is too soft
Hi,
Ok, so I finally bought a pair of stands, and a jack (all rated at 2.25 tonnes)....I got it in a package for $39US. Anywho, I also needed an oil change, so my bro and I figured the jack+stand would come in handy. I raised the car from the front, and placed the stands on the side frame...just after I placed the stands, I thought one of the wheels on my jack got crushed or something. Turned out, it sunk into the soft driveway. After pulling out the jack, I noticed about a .5" groove left by one of the wheel on my jack. What a bummer...after oil change, raised car up again, and noticed the stands had also left a groove on the driveway (althought not as deep as jack)... This is a real bummer. What can I place under the jacks+stands so I don't get grooves all over my driveway! I think wood would be a bit too soft. I dunno... Bye! ------------------ Gautam N. Lad http://www.cubicdesign.com http://www.cubicdesign.com/mustang/ |
06-18-2001, 07:37 PM | #2 |
Mustang Maniac
Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: GA, U.S.A
Posts: 2,266
|
1/2" thick particle boards under each jack stand would suffice.
----------------------------------------- '79 Mustang Coup w/ 4" Cowl Stock 5.8L, C4 w/ shift kit Holley 750 cfm, Edelbrock Performer RPM intake 1 5/8" MAC shorty headers, Al driveshaft 2.5" Off road H-pipe, 2-chamber Flowmasters Front: 225/60/15, Rear: 255/60/15 Eagle GT II Weld wheels (15x6;15x8), 8.8" Rear w/ 3.55s 14 x 4” K&N air filter (getting the Xtreme setup someday) "Red, thou art my companion. Hasten now your quickened metamorphosis to Green that I may conquer all who dare abide there beside me. May they be left thither behind burnt black." ---Fox Body |
06-19-2001, 11:23 AM | #3 |
Registered Member
Join Date: May 1999
Location: Mandan, ND USA
Posts: 184
|
I've used chunks of wood on dirt surfaces before, I'm sure it will work on your pavement. The bigger it is, the better it will distribute the weight.
|
06-19-2001, 11:57 AM | #4 |
Tires Fear Me...
Join Date: Jan 2001
Posts: 867
|
Thats the bad thing about pavement on a hot day..Any chunk of wood will do the trick..
------------------ 347 Stroker Motor: Balanced, Cobra Transmission, Extrude Ported and Polished Upper and ported Lower, GT40 Milled Ported and Polished Heads, B303 Cam, BBK 1 5/8 Headers, 30lb Bosch Injectors, Holley AFPR, March Underdrive Pulleys, Perma-Cool Fan, 3-Core Radiator, Accel Performance Coil, Accel 300+ Racing Wires, Ram Air, K&N Filter, 73mm Vortech MAF, 70mm TB, FlowMaster Exhaust w/BBK Offroad H-Pipe, Hurst Shifter, 3:55 Gears, Ram Clutch, Cross Drilled Rotors, AC del, rear seat del. |
06-19-2001, 04:13 PM | #5 |
The Dude
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Arlington, VA
Posts: 1,262
|
hehe, you said "tonnes"
Get some particle board/plywood and put it under your jacking equipment. that'll do it. |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Buying Jacks & Stands : Need advice | Gautam | Blue Oval Lounge | 5 | 02-23-2001 07:24 PM |