grahamfitter
Expedition Leader
Quixote said:Okay, so now I have a shopping list:
1) Hi-Lift Xtreme Jack, 60"
2) Hi-Lift Jack mate (to raise the wheel)
3) Wider Base for the high lift
4) Hi-Lift Off-Road kit (To use Hi-Lift as a manual winch)
5) 2 FourTreks mounts (@$89 a piece )
6) Bill Burke CD
Take stock bottle jack for simple changes. Scrap Bushranger - Hi-Lift will do what it does.
And, of course, practice, practice to use the Hi-Lift. Am I missing anything?
I've just been through the same thing - I want the absolute minimum recovery stuff - and I started off knowing absolutely nothing. I read every single recovery thread I could find here, and also Bill Burke's page Using the Hi-Lift Jack.
I ended up with this minimal shopping list, which is basically what Bill Burke suggests on his page:
- 48 inch hi-lift jack. This is a very heavy cumbersome beast but just fits on the floor behind the front seats in my Jeep Wrangler where its lashed to the bottom of the roll cage. I imagine the 60 inch jack would be a real handful.
- 20 feet of grade 70 3/8" transport chain with choker hooks on each end.
- 3 shackles with 3/4" pin.
- Two 10 feet by 3" tree saver straps.
- Portable air compressor. It seems that lowering air pressure can increase traction and avoid the need for recovery in the first place but you have to put the air back later.
Here's what I didn't get and why:
- Hi lift offroad kit. This makes it easier to use the jack as a winch but you don't need it. You still have to buy the choker chain anyway.
- Hi lift base. This would be nice but a plywood board with a bolt in it works just as well.
- Hi lift jack mate. This would be nice too, but the bottle jack will be easier for flats and for everything else you should be able to jack up the bumper.
- Tow strap. I might still get one. But its only useful if there's another vehicle to pull you.
The only thing I'm still missing is a rear recovery point on the frame which will be a couple of minimal tow hooks.
And heavy duty springs. This stuff is heavy.
Like I said I'm a beginner so my knowledge is minimal and this is just my two cents. I'm willing to bow to everyone with more experience than me.
Cheers,
Graham