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Jacking point protection - Lrac

The 30 year old lump of wood that I put between my jacking points and trolley jack has finally split. now that I have got over the loss I was wondering if anyone makes a suitable replacement ?

I hate to see various tyre fitters simply stuff a trolley jack under my cars and jack away without any regard for my paint / sills / jacking points.

Jacking point protection - badbusdriver

www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Rubber-Pad-Block-Hydraulic-Ramp...b

Jacking point protection - Mick27

Hockey puck. Cheap. Ideal for the job. Can be notched with a hacksaw if required.

Jacking point protection - corax

Hockey puck. Cheap. Ideal for the job. Can be notched with a hacksaw if required.

Seconded. I got one with a groove already cut.

Jacking point protection - stan10

I've never liked the idea of putting something loose between jack, and jacking point, so have just always been careful about positioning the jack to avoid damage as far as poss, but i do like the idea of the hockey puck - soft enough to be moulded / modified, but firm enough to be supportive ...

Gotta check this out.

Jacking point protection - gordonbennet

My Weber trolley jack has a rubber pad, should be possible to cut one, to suit a jack without a suitable hole for the right pad, out of a piece of hard rubber, section of car tyre tread would be ideal.

Jacking point protection - bathtub tom

I use a piece of old towel.

Jacking point protection - bazza

A piece of roofing lead folded appropriately.

Jacking point protection - Ian D
Go to a well known internet auction site and type in the search box jack pad and a multitude of options for a few pounds each come up.
As said most (all?) tyre places jack up under the sill lip which can cause damage, really annoys me... I sometimes even remove two wheels and take them in in our other car for new tyres rather than have some idiot damage the car...

Edited by Ian D on 02/02/2020 at 20:48

Jacking point protection - Brit_in_Germany

Alternatively, get a car with proper jacking points.

Jacking point protection - Lrac

Alternatively, get a car with proper jacking points.

What's " a proper jacking point". Never owned or seen a car that didn't have a specific jacking point designed for an appropriate shape or fitting.

I appreciate you can simply stuff a jack anywhere that looks strong enough but I am old enough to remember stories of Allegro windscreen problems after careless jacking,

Jacking point protection - Sparky Mark
www.amazon.co.uk/PLANGER-Trolley-Universal-Protect...P
Jacking point protection - Lrac

Great replies as always. Had no idea they were readily available and hockey puck also looks like an excellent idea. Many thanks

Jacking point protection - John F

The sole of an old trainer shoe, cut to size with a Stanley knife.

Jacking point protection - Lrac

The sole of an old trainer shoe, cut to size with a Stanley knife.

That sounds a bit Hi Tec

Jacking point protection - John F

The sole of an old trainer shoe, cut to size with a Stanley knife.

That sounds a bit Hi Tec

No, Weightlifters ;-)

Jacking point protection - Brit_in_Germany

This is the jacking point on an Alfa Giulia

www.giuliaforums.com/d1/attachments/5/5864-455372f...g

Jacking point protection - Lrac

have to admit it never occurred to me to replace the car rather than the piece of wood with a £3 hockey puck..

Jacking point protection - Andrew-T

I've never liked the idea of putting something loose between jack, and jacking point, so have just always been careful about positioning the jack

All the (many) Peugeots I have owned come with a jack designed to fit on the jacking points without fear of movement.

Jacking point protection - Lrac

Coincidentally both my cars are Peugeots.

Jacking point protection - Andrew-T

Coincidentally both my cars are Peugeots.

Ah, there speaks another wise person :-) But your mention of a trolley jack suggests that you are doing rather more than changing wheels round? I don't do much more than change oil and filter these days, and for that I use a pair of ramps. Though I have lifted a car with OEM jacks and left it on bricks and timber while wheels were being refurbished. Always with softwood between subframe and bricks, of course.

Jacking point protection - Lrac

Coincidentally both my cars are Peugeots.

Ah, there speaks another wise person :-) But your mention of a trolley jack suggests that you are doing rather more than changing wheels round? I don't do much more than change oil and filter these days, and for that I use a pair of ramps. Though I have lifted a car with OEM jacks and left it on bricks and timber while wheels were being refurbished. Always with softwood between subframe and bricks, of course.

It is a bit of a struggle these days (back still aching from cleaning the car on Sunday) so I tend to build up to specific jobs with many days in between. There is a Pela vacuum pump still in its box ready for the day I concede defeat.

My ramps are a bit steep for my cars and I find that the Peugeot jacks tend to wind up my nitrile gloves. My 108 didn't come with a jack or a spare wheel.(sorted that immediately) which I imagine is common practice these days. I always have a trolley jack lying around in the garage so its just convenient.

Jacking point protection - Andrew-T

The 30 year old lump of wood that I put between my jacking points and trolley jack has finally split. now that I have got over the loss I was wondering if anyone makes a suitable replacement ?

I have no shortage of lumps of wood for my car. Watching it being MoT'd the other day I saw the tester use bits of 2x4 when he raised it to check the brakes were free. So it seems the more traditional technicians still use traditional methods.

I don't see any need to spend money getting a special lump of softish material for this job.

Jacking point protection - gordonbennet
I don't see any need to spend money getting a special lump of softish material for this job.

I take your point, its just that proper trolley jacks, and the OP did mention trolley jack as i recall, come with a hole in the lifting plate into which fits the cup, which also has a hole to accept the correct rubber pad which fits snugly in the cup and is held firmly in place, this obviously doesn't apply to small £30 jacks with a cup that could double as an eggcup.

Jacking point protection - madf

I use a offcut rectangular block of woood with a sawcut down the middle into which the vertical section of the sill sits..

Easy and cost free.. and when it breaks, make another...

Jacking point protection - edlithgow

I use a offcut rectangular block of woood with a sawcut down the middle into which the vertical section of the sill sits..

Easy and cost free.. and when it breaks, make another...

If you are still functional.

I don't generallyl like wood (especially softwoods) in this application because it can split down the grain.

Railways are good sources of useful bits (eg sleeper cleats) also some industrial flloor tiles, and rubber mounting blocks for aircon equipment.

Scaffolding foot pads would probably be good too but I havn't seen any lying around yet.

Edited by edlithgow on 03/02/2020 at 18:41

Jacking point protection - Avant

Aren't motoring forums wonderful places to discover problems that you never knew existed, even after 54 years of driving!

Not being capable of the sort of advanced car maintenance that you need a jack for (albeit with total respect for those who are), I have only ever jacked up a car to change a wheel.

1 Look in the handbook (unless you have a Volvo, when you have to go online and find it with great difficulty). VAG handbooks are excellent, with lots of warnings about things not to do.

2 Position the jack where it tells you to.

3 Loosen the wheel nuts and jack the car up.

Jacking point protection - thunderbird

I use a offcut rectangular block of woood with a sawcut down the middle into which the vertical section of the sill sits..

I don't generallyl like wood (especially softwoods) in this application because it can split down the grain.

Been using wood since the 1970's and never had a single issue. It will of course split if you put the grain along the sill section but put the load across the grain and you will never have an issue.

My current blocks were made from a piece of surplus decking which is about 1 1/2" thick (not the cheapo Wickes stuff). It is certainly more dense than the typical softwood you get.

But do not use the machined groves to locate the block, these are along the grain and the block will split.

Jacking point protection - edlithgow

I use a offcut rectangular block of woood with a sawcut down the middle into which the vertical section of the sill sits..

I don't generallyl like wood (especially softwoods) in this application because it can split down the grain.

Been using wood since the 1970's and never had a single issue. It will of course split if you put the grain along the sill section but put the load across the grain and you will never have an issue.

My current blocks were made from a piece of surplus decking which is about 1 1/2" thick (not the cheapo Wickes stuff). It is certainly more dense than the typical softwood you get.

But do not use the machined groves to locate the block, these are along the grain and the block will split.

Seems reasonable if you are using a trolley jack under sills, but I never do that because I don't have a trolley jack (a bulky item) and years of British bangers mean I tend to distrust sills for life-threatening load bearing.

I don't use "official" jacking points either, since they tend to be rust traps and designed to fit the supplied occaisional use jack, which I often dont have anyway,.

If there isn't a suitable strong point for the bottle jack (roll bar mounting plate on the front of the current car) I think its sometimes worth making one (steel channel wedged in alongside a rear suspension mount on the current car).

A bottle jack has too small a contact area to be safe with most woods, IMO.

Edited by edlithgow on 06/02/2020 at 18:58

Jacking point protection - Penumbra

I recall reading somewhere that Volvo had an electronic manual built into the infotainment system but I could be wrong.

If tyre fitters can't jack up a standard ICE vehicle without causing damage then heaven help EV owners. Some EVs can't be jacked but only lifted on ramps apparently.

Edited by Penumbra on 04/02/2020 at 16:26

Jacking point protection - Lrac

I believe a lot of new cars are sold without a jack and the sort of jacks that suit my needs are supplied without an appropriate pad / cushion etc.

I get a lot of satisfaction from working on my cars and would not expect anyone else to go to the extremes that I go to i.e If I dust my brakes I will de glaze the pads / shoes clean and appropriately lube all parts. I then scrub the wheel and clean inside the arches, wire brushing anything that may look a bit suspect, this is followed by a few squirts of grease on bleed nipples / brake pipes/ nuts and bolts etc.

Front brakes would take about as long as the Sunday roast takes my wife to cook. so I simply pace myself whenever I have a few minute spare.

Jacking point protection - Manatee

A square of carpet protects the sill when I use my trolley jack

I also have a couple of rubber puck shaped things with a groove in specifically made for the purpose. And four rubber pucks to sit it axle stands to give a level pad.

Jacking point protection - blindspot

i've a rubber from the rear suspension leg . fits my 76 year old Bradbury trolley jack perfectly.