Nope certainly not for the reasons I have explained. Hi-Lifts are unstable and that is part of their design. I would never get underneath a vehicle to position an axle stand if it was only held up by a hi-lift. I have seen these things slice a door in half when the vehicle moved suddenly and without warning. What was even worse was the fact that the passenger refused to get out of that vehicle and subsequently suffered quite nasty injuries as the jack tore its way through the door and into her
Hydraulic bottle jacks are our recommended way to go as the are quicker and as safe as any other vehicle jack.
It may be a rash assumption but if you are putting a vehicle on to stands I figure this is being done in a garage rather than some remote part of the world? One other solution we have seen folk with more room and carrying capacity than sense is they take a garage type vehicle jack. One option we use is air operated bellows in remote areas but this is highly specialised stuff
Regards
RobA
First, please note that while I own a Hi-Lift, I rarely use it for anything and far prefer to use a bottle jack to lift a vehicle, regardless of the reason the lift is needed.
But, that said, if you can't use the Hi-Lift for any reasons secondary to mere lift, such as changing a tire (or tyre if you live upside down) what do you use one for, and why carry it? It is the world's worst recovery device, makes a very unhandy vice, and aside from lifting vehicles, has little use (even though it can be put to various uses).
Folks have been lifting vehicles with this type jack for going on a hundred years, primarily to change tires. Our old '56 Chevy came with one stock with a bumper hook as the principal means of lifting the vehicle. And it worked. They have their issues, but do lift, generally much farther than any other type of lifting device readily carriable into the field. If you can't do anything with the vehicle once lifted, what's the point?