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  #1  
Old 05-23-2016, 01:24 PM
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Panteracer Panteracer is offline
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Default Car Blocks

I made up a set of these last year
They work great and give you a little
more stability in earthquake country

Nice job

Bob
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  #2  
Old 05-23-2016, 03:19 PM
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BMR Sales BMR Sales is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Panteracer View Post
I made up a set of these last year
They work great and give you a little
more stability in earthquake country

Nice job

Bob
Always wondered how you guys get under a car with any confidence when the ground could shake at any time!
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  #3  
Old 05-23-2016, 10:02 PM
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NorCal72 NorCal72 is offline
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Default 2x4 stands

I went 16x12 i believe. I went just high enough where my big floor jack could get to the bottom of the housing. Stable as can be. No clue why the pics are upside down.....Buy a Mac they said.....
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Old 05-23-2016, 10:08 PM
MtotheIKEo MtotheIKEo is offline
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I made mine 16" long x 14" wide. I also made them so each corner is actually 2 cribs stacked since my jack wouldn't lift my car high enough in one shot.

As far as strength goes, we used to stack 20k lb roof sections on 36" high cribs (one at each corner) built the same way.
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Old 05-25-2016, 11:57 AM
Zoomin Zoomin is offline
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Glad you asked the question as I need to build a set myself. I have a two post lift, but there's some things that require having the weight on the suspension.
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  #6  
Old 05-25-2016, 12:44 PM
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I made the tops of mine flat all the way across and I put shims under them so that they sit perfectly level on my unlevel garage floor. This gives me a flat platform to use when making suspension adjustments with the weight on the tires. Being flat on top lets me use turn tables to check and set caster while on the blocks.



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  #7  
Old 05-25-2016, 03:44 PM
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Panteracer Panteracer is offline
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Default Car Blocks

Lance I was under the Firebird many moons ago
with it sitting on jackstands when we had a 5.0 quake
I was out from under that car in no time

It does make you think about it
My new shop has t-bar ceilings with 2x4 drop-in
lights.. I don't think the lights have the extra wires
and there are no compression posts on the ceiling grid
that we normally do on new ceilings...(I am a contractor)
The building is metal and will flex but I am sure lights and ceiling may not
be good bouncing off the cars

Bob
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Old 06-01-2016, 08:20 AM
minendrews68 minendrews68 is offline
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I made mine 16"x16", 6" tall. I also made them where I could interlock them together and get additional heights at 6" each. Best money I've ever spent. Although, (and it takes a little work) find where someone is building a house and ask if you can go through their scrap 2x4's. I'm betting you could probably get enough free wood to build them.
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  #9  
Old 06-01-2016, 02:46 PM
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Best tool in my garage is these blocks never a worry to climb under car and u can have car at ride height wit out suspension hanging!
have had mine for 10 yrs.

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Old 06-01-2016, 04:50 PM
will69camaro will69camaro is offline
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Yea I built mine 16" x 16" as well as you can cut clean 8ft 2x4's into this length and have no small scraps. I made mine 8 stacked high so they're right at the top of my jack which is nice. Feel 100% confident crawling under the car, which I never was on jack stands.

Wish I had built them sooner. Cost about $35-40 in materials.


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