I got this jack a year ago. Only use it for small compact vehicles. I don’t have a garage so this jack works just fine for me. I’ve probably used it a 12 times and it’s not amazing but it’s better than what comes in ur vehicle with the spare tire. I would get a better one but I don’t use it much to justify getting a better one.
i have owned 4 of these jacks and they all keep breaking where the handle pushes in the hydraulics, there is a small metal clip there that bends and makes the jack fail, be careful of that and if it does bend you can fix it just takes some patients. i stopped buying them and bought a 1.5 ton aluminum jack for $99 that came with a few jack stands, good jack for a tire change or oil change. appreciate the video :)
I didn't even know they sold these anymore. Buy the walmart ones and buy some o-ring assortment because you're going to have to change the orings at least after 5 uses. Buy some jack hydraulic oil too. Trolley jacks are made by cheap chinese parts no matter where you buy yours from. Like I said, buy some assorted orings HNBR and/or nitrate (nbr) and gets some hydraulic jack oil (from your local autoparts store). Also I pulled the trigger and got a 20 inch 3T quick pump jack. They're currently around $130 to $250 bucks, but I got one for $80 bucks by luck. I can lift the whole front-end of the car in about 25 pumps o a lift height of +20 inches. I use ramps and now I have a jack just incase the wooden car ramps miraculously collapse for some "god hates me reason."
I got it works great 🤞been holding one side rear for 2 days now got 3 ton jack stands to
I got this jack a year ago. Only use it for small compact vehicles. I don’t have a garage so this jack works just fine for me. I’ve probably used it a 12 times and it’s not amazing but it’s better than what comes in ur vehicle with the spare tire. I would get a better one but I don’t use it much to justify getting a better one.
@@kidreplay1 thank for your reply
i have owned 4 of these jacks and they all keep breaking where the handle pushes in the hydraulics, there is a small metal clip there that bends and makes the jack fail, be careful of that and if it does bend you can fix it just takes some patients. i stopped buying them and bought a 1.5 ton aluminum jack for $99 that came with a few jack stands, good jack for a tire change or oil change. appreciate the video :)
@@zbow1974 thanks for the comment I was hesitant to get these but I was in a time crunch I guess I'll see how long it will go.
I didn't even know they sold these anymore.
Buy the walmart ones and buy some o-ring assortment because you're going to have to change the orings at least after 5 uses. Buy some jack hydraulic oil too.
Trolley jacks are made by cheap chinese parts no matter where you buy yours from. Like I said, buy some assorted orings HNBR and/or nitrate (nbr) and gets some hydraulic jack oil (from your local autoparts store).
Also I pulled the trigger and got a 20 inch 3T quick pump jack. They're currently around $130 to $250 bucks, but I got one for $80 bucks by luck. I can lift the whole front-end of the car in about 25 pumps o a lift height of +20 inches. I use ramps and now I have a jack just incase the wooden car ramps miraculously collapse for some "god hates me reason."
@@complexity5545 excellent info thank you for sharing. Yes my expectations for this jack are not high 🫤