And Unlike The Bottle Jack and the Floor/Trolley Jack and The ARB Jack the Hi-Lift don't leak Oil every damn place
Sounds like the Jack I am looking for,The Toyota mechanical 'bottle' jacks don't have any oil in them. They don't leak anything.
You can also use them sideways and upside down if you need to.
Still weighs a ton less than a winch and winch bumper. (that get used once every three years)
I'm using winch rope.
A Hi-lift is about 30-40lbs depending on which model you have. A short drum 6-9k winch with synthetic is about 40-50lbs.
I wouldn't say that is a night and day difference in weight.
To each their own... glad it worked for you.... "Its not the destination its the journey."
With the old, winch equipped Jeeps, I would normally winch something like that out of the way or just drive over it (does feel a bit tippy at times)... not really practical with most/many dedicated street/road vehicles though.
...sometimes you just gotta turn around and detour however;
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...oulder-size-house-falls-Colorado-highway.html
Enjoy!
The Toyota mechanical 'bottle' jacks don't have any oil in them. They don't leak anything.
You can also use them sideways and upside down if you need to.
I’ve been looking on EBay and the ones I’ve seen don’t show a jack handle. I’ll keep digging.I use jack handle what comes with the Toyota.
Thats a handy tool overall. Of course use it as intended and positioning the jack under the car, its also handy to reach under to retrieve objects.
Hot Ticket (as Marv Spector sometimes used to say): buy one, or better, two additional handle extensions for the Toyota bottle jack. Then you can comfortably crank it while not having to be close to, or partially under, the vehicle, depending on your choice of jacking point. Note: Due to slight differences in the jack package included with 4Runners, Land Cruisers, and the various p/u trucks, all the jacks accept all the hook shaped ends of the handle extension rods, but some of the extensions differ slightly in the dimensions of the nesting ends. Some filing may be needed to make new extensions work with a particular vintage extension. I also carry 4 pieces of 1'x1'x3/4" plywood, drilled to accept a couple bolts to hold the jack to the wood.You folks that are using a Toyota Bottle Jack, what are you using to actually crank it with? I don’t (will not) own a Toyota vehicle again (I know, but personal experience with three of them is different than many folks have had). So what are you using to turn that ring thingie?
I like the idea of a mechanical bottle jack like this instead of or addition to a Hi-Lift for my Rubicon.