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So I am now the proud owner of a 2007 Chevy Silverado 1500 LT Extended Cab with 151,000 miles on it. Yesterday I needed to do my first oil change on it, and step one is to lift the front end onto jack stands. Pertinent details:

  • The vehicle curb weight is 5745 pounds.
  • The stands are very tall and are each rated for 3 tons.
  • The floor jack is also rated for 3 tons.
  • I looked up the jacking points in the manual and used them. They are on the frame rails just aft of the front wheels.
  • The tops of the jack stands do have rubber covers to reduce the effect of the stand on the frame, but there is nothing else between the stand head and the frame.

Here's my question: When I lifted the front end by placing the jack on a frame rail cross member, as I slowly lowered the weight onto the stands the insert that can be raised and lowered (see arrows in attached picture) tilted about 5 degrees as it took the weight. It was already centered correctly under the frame member and moving it to one side would make a slip off more likely. Was this a safe situation? I did the oil change by using both stands and leaving the floor jack in place without weight on it as a safety backup. Was this safe? How do you verify that the lift you've done is actually safe? Or is it just time to buy myself a 4 post lift and be done with it?

What makes me nervous is the very heavy curb weight of the vehicle, and the possibility of that weight pushing the stand top through the frame rail, slipping off the stand, or extending the stand height beyond what it should be and having it fold in half. All with a very unhappy me under all that weight.

Heavy Duty Jack Stands

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    I'm assuming you weren't working an incline. I'd say as long as you don't extend them beyond the last legitimate peg on the stand, you can feel safe. I wouldn't even worry about that 5 degree tilt. They wiggle a bit one way or the other as they settle. That said, even jack stands can fail so I always leave the jack in place in the event the worst happens. Also, if you remove your tires, it's a good idea to put them under the car under the rail just behind the jacks.
    – atraudes
    Commented Feb 27, 2017 at 21:49
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    4x4? If it is put the stands on the front axle.
    – Ben
    Commented Feb 27, 2017 at 22:29
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    For any job that doesn't require taking the wheels off, I'd recommend using ramps instead of a jack+stands. The cheap Harbor Freight ramps provide plenty of clearance to change the oil in my lowered car, and are a lot less nerve racking to set up. Commented Feb 27, 2017 at 22:30
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    @Ben - It doesn't have a straight axle, but a front independent with A-Arms. Commented Feb 27, 2017 at 23:22
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    I actually have ramps, but I need to figure out how to drive up onto them without them moving. I seem to remember there's a good question in here about that so I'll start there.
    – cdunn
    Commented Feb 27, 2017 at 23:32

3 Answers 3

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What I do if I'm not sure about the vehicle being stable way up there is:

  • gently nudge the vehicle side to side using only the strength from your wrists. Kind of like when you're checking if a door in your house is actually latched or just resting against the door jam without the door knob's latch actually holding. Or like when you come home late, the wife's already asleep and you're trying to open the bedroom door without it creaking.
  • repeat same front to back
  • repeat same downward

Since you don't need the wheels to come off, an alternative to jacking your truck just for an oil change is to build yourself some ramps.

  1. Get some 2x8, or 2x10, or 2x12 lumber (get whatever is a bit wider than one of your tires)
  2. Cut 3 or 4 pieces of it that are each 1 foot shorter than the next
  3. Cut 1 end of each piece at a 45
  4. Line the pieces up, longest at the bottom, shortest at the top, all flush at the straight end
  5. Use lots of screws, really long ones
  6. Make 4 of these

The thickness of the wood will be holding the truck's weight. The more height you need, the more layers you need. Mine are 3 layers, I wouldn't recommend going much higher than 4.

enter image description here

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  • on the wood ramps: it helps to have some sort of stopper at the end so you don't accidently overshoot after you reach the top
    – Zshoulders
    Commented Feb 27, 2017 at 23:03
  • Yeah, stoppers would help. I'm just paranoid when driving up these, I stomp on the brakes as soon as I'm up a 3rd bump, put it in park, then go out and see. I did leave myself some reasonable length to not overshoot, see picture.
    – tlhIngan
    Commented Feb 28, 2017 at 0:01
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Perhaps I will get some heat for my opinion but I do not like the shown jack stands. I have a (totally unfounded) fear that I could hit the lever with my feet and the stand collapses, that the locking mechanism isn't really engaged or that the cast iron extension shatters because some guy in an far-eastern foundry wanted to safe on precious alloy materials. (Paranoia is good for you, especially if everyone is after you)

My personal philosophy is to use a cheap car jack but expensive jack stands. While additional safety methods (two jack stands, the jack still raised, wooden blocks under the axle, etc.) are fine but can lead to dangerous security assumptions (the jack can loose pressure and give way, you could accidentally kick a sluggish constructed tower of wooden block).

Long story short:

The measures that hold up your truck while you are under it have to be 100% sure, have a good backup but do not rely on X different measures that all have a realistic chance of failing.

Ok, what now?

Get some good jack stands and some wheel chucks:

I prefer the shown type of jack stand (shown is a stronger specimen than the ones I use). Please note the horizontal bolt, as a bonus you can always visually inspect the locking mechanism. Good jack stands come (at least in my place) with an highly official looking safety certificate and shouldn't be made of cast iron but rolled/forged steel. enter image description here[![enter image description here

While the prices often seem to be higher than some cheaper alternatives I personally am delighted to buy some security and confidence.

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    FYI you couldn't move that lever with your feet if you kicked at it deliberately. When the load is on, you can't move the lever. But, that said, these do look stronger. I'm guessing from the design of the top that they are never used on a car at the pinch welds?
    – cdunn
    Commented Feb 27, 2017 at 23:51
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    Yah, here's some heat for you ... completely unfounded fear. I get where you're coming from, but realistically the lever type is just as solid as what you are showing. Either type is going to be completely safe if placed correctly under the vehicle. Commented Feb 27, 2017 at 23:54
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    Partially in @Myself's defense, the ratchety type do not have great quality control, especially the cheapo ones. I am inherently far more distrustful of poorly welded, chunk missing, sketchy impure metal 12 dollar stands... than I am of the giant pin-through-the-hole type that typically can support FAR in excess of what the car I am under weighs.
    – Zshoulders
    Commented Feb 28, 2017 at 4:22
  • @cdunn when I wanted some jack stands I visited some local tool chain and saw the ratchet-type jack stands. The dealer applied pressure on the top with his hand and I hitted the lever. The noise of the jack collapsing burned in my memory. Ofc it was only the force of the clerks hand (the weight of a car would have prevented it) that allowed the ratchet to unlock but I knew that I will never feel good with those. Also it could be that something shakes (I know the chance is close to 0) but that would, under circumstances, allow the ratchet to open
    – Martin
    Commented Feb 28, 2017 at 8:41
  • @cdunn I place a piece of hard rubber between the top and the pinch welds. But I have to be carefull to not damage them, yes
    – Martin
    Commented Feb 28, 2017 at 8:44
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The short answer is: "I probably wouldn't worry about it"

Typical tooth having stands like this flex a bit when only 2 wheels are off the ground. As the frame of the vehicle is coming down, the head of the jackstand is parallel to the ground, but the frame of the car is at a slight angle with the ground. Some point of the frame is going to contact the jackstand first, and its going to flex accordingly. And with 2 wheels still on the ground, it is unlikely the frame will bend down far enough to sit flush on the stand.

This makes it particularily important to chock the back wheels. Rolling backwards/rolling the stand over is probably your biggest danger at this point (beyond mechanical failure of the stand or somebody horsing around nearby).

Some things that make me feel more safe are keeping the jack in place, throwing some wheels under there, or placing an extra pair of jackstands someplace out of the way. You could even purchase a 16+ ton semi truck jackstand and place that under a center piece of frame. I wouldn't put the load on it, but it would ideally keep you safe if something happened. Do at least one of these, Absolutely no reason to bet your life on a single point of failure.

If it was still bending like this with all 4 wheels in the air and the frame parallel to the ground, I would be more concerned.

Edit on determining safety of a lift: After the car is sitting on the stands, walk around and give it a good shove on every side. Without getting fully under the car, pull/push on the jackstands and make sure none of them move. If one of them does, lift the car back up and try it again.

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