MikeHenderson
Member
The Hi-Lift is designed by humans for use by humans. As such, with a human's propensity to make mistakes and fail to pay attention, it is a hazardous design. Sure, if you do everything right, no problem. Even if you discount the base design, the ARB design has less user error hazards and pinch points.
I don't have a ton of experience with a Hi-Lift. Before this video I hadn't used one in a few years. My first experience with one was to jack up my dad's truck when it got high centered only to have the truck roll off it and dent the tailgate. So it took me a minute to remember the sequence, which happened off camera. The ARB Jack, is really self explanatory. Anyone who knows the basic purpose of a jack can walk up to it and figure it out without much difficulty.
If you've never used a hi-lift and were given one to jack up a vehicle you'd have trouble. I have no doubt one could figure it out. But that's the hazard. If you don't take the time to understand the function, then the hazards are harder to avoid.
This thread has made me realize that the ARB Jack isn't made for people like @67cj5. He knows what he's doing, has the experience and skill. It's made for the overlanders who don't have that depth of experience and want a jack that is easy and relatively safe to use in a casual manner on the rare occasion their BFG KO2s give out. They're not going to use it as a winch. They're not going to use it as a lever to walk over a hole. They're just going to use it to crush their factory bumper Then call a tow truck.
-M
I don't have a ton of experience with a Hi-Lift. Before this video I hadn't used one in a few years. My first experience with one was to jack up my dad's truck when it got high centered only to have the truck roll off it and dent the tailgate. So it took me a minute to remember the sequence, which happened off camera. The ARB Jack, is really self explanatory. Anyone who knows the basic purpose of a jack can walk up to it and figure it out without much difficulty.
If you've never used a hi-lift and were given one to jack up a vehicle you'd have trouble. I have no doubt one could figure it out. But that's the hazard. If you don't take the time to understand the function, then the hazards are harder to avoid.
This thread has made me realize that the ARB Jack isn't made for people like @67cj5. He knows what he's doing, has the experience and skill. It's made for the overlanders who don't have that depth of experience and want a jack that is easy and relatively safe to use in a casual manner on the rare occasion their BFG KO2s give out. They're not going to use it as a winch. They're not going to use it as a lever to walk over a hole. They're just going to use it to crush their factory bumper Then call a tow truck.
-M