I just purchased the same unit. My shed is 12'x16'. Also, the floor height is 16" off the ground, so I'm going in and out on a 4'x10' ramp. This should be the cat's meow! Thank you for your video.
Thanks for looking out. What do you see as the risk? Twisting the wrist from the torque, or lifting up the bike too fast? Both? Something else entirely?
@@HighDesertHills First of Cheers for the video, great review & just what i was looking for, Will now buy the lift. Adding on to what Dude was saying, its about safety based on the balance of the bike, if you lift it up too fast by using a drill and the bike somehow wasn’t balanced properly, theres a much higher chance of it tipping. if you were doing smaller controlled pumps or twist while watching how the bike is reacting to the Jack moving it upwards, youd more likely be able to correct it much earlier if something was to going to go wrong. But you know the sweet spot cs you jacked it up 10x id use a drill as well if there was one next to me.
Steel castors are not covered. Would have been nice if they locked in place. Also, if you liked to keep your feet, please don't stick them between the jack😬. Would have been nice if the locked in place with a pin. The bearing on mine is really loose 7/10 quality. I added 2 steel handles to the side of both the stand and the roller castor. Grease the threads and wrapped the bearing that sits behind the lift nut with heat shrink for wiring so the bearings don't fall out.
I just purchased the same unit. My shed is 12'x16'. Also, the floor height is 16" off the ground, so I'm going in and out on a 4'x10' ramp. This should be the cat's meow! Thank you for your video.
A must have if you do any maintenance or need to move your bike around your garage!!
Thank you for this video!
Never use a power drill to lift that up but hey you will learn the hard way
Thanks for looking out. What do you see as the risk? Twisting the wrist from the torque, or lifting up the bike too fast? Both? Something else entirely?
I don’t see the risk. Can you educate us on it or you just here to troll with the way you ended that?
Some of them even come with a 21mm socket to use lol
It will cause damage to the screw and bearings @@HighDesertHills
@@HighDesertHills First of Cheers for the video, great review & just what i was looking for, Will now buy the lift.
Adding on to what Dude was saying, its about safety based on the balance of the bike, if you lift it up too fast by using a drill and the bike somehow wasn’t balanced properly, theres a much higher chance of it tipping.
if you were doing smaller controlled pumps or twist while watching how the bike is reacting to the Jack moving it upwards, youd more likely be able to correct it much earlier if something was to going to go wrong.
But you know the sweet spot cs you jacked it up 10x id use a drill as well if there was one next to me.
Steel castors are not covered. Would have been nice if they locked in place. Also, if you liked to keep your feet, please don't stick them between the jack😬. Would have been nice if the locked in place with a pin.
The bearing on mine is really loose 7/10 quality. I added 2 steel handles to the side of both the stand and the roller castor. Grease the threads and wrapped the bearing that sits behind the lift nut with heat shrink for wiring so the bearings don't fall out.
Great feedback. Thanks for the tips.
Good review. It works! Safety is on the users preference.....😂
Nice!
SKIP TO 5:50
Thank you.
You need to center the lift on the frame. It looks very Sketchy
Yeah, it was a bit wobbly with the positioning in this vid. Thanks!
Do you think it would work on a 1600 cc or no
It should be fine. It’s rated for 1100 lbs, and I don’t know of any motorcycles that weigh that much.
Hi there, are the steel casters covered by rubber/plastic around?
China Plastic no steel.
Hands and feet, hands and feet, watch their placement when that thing is holding something
You didnt grease the screw and you used an impact driver which you not supposed to. 🤔
What can I say? I live in the edge 🤷