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I made up a set of wooden blocks that I can use to support the car. I made four of them for $16. I use the floor jack to lift the car on one side (if I lift at the rear jack point, it'll lift both the front and rear tires high enough) and slide the blocks under the tires, set it down on the blocks, then go around and do the same thing on the other side. it takes maybee 5 minutes total.
It gives about 9" of lift in all, which is quite enough to get under there and do halfshafts, exhaust work, torsion bars, etc... No worries about stability or the car rolling off.
The blocks are 16" long. You can make two of them from one 10 foot long 2x8. Cut six pieces at 16", then cut whats left into 4 even pieces for the end stops. A little gorilla glue, a few screws, and you're in buisness.
-John
'94 968 Iris Blue
'84 944 Gemini Grey (gone but not forgotten...)
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[quote name='jpk' post='38710' date='Jul 23 2007, 03:04 PM']I made up a set of wooden blocks that I can use to support the car. I made four of them for $16. I use the floor jack to lift the car on one side (if I lift at the rear jack point, it'll lift both the front and rear tires high enough) and slide the blocks under the tires, set it down on the blocks, then go around and do the same thing on the other side. it takes maybee 5 minutes total.
It gives about 9" of lift in all, which is quite enough to get under there and do halfshafts, exhaust work, torsion bars, etc... No worries about stability or the car rolling off.
The blocks are 16" long. You can make two of them from one 10 foot long 2x8. Cut six pieces at 16", then cut whats left into 4 even pieces for the end stops. A little gorilla glue, a few screws, and you're in buisness.
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[/quote]
HA, Ingenious!
Paint ‘em black and add a Porsche logo. Now there worth $90.00
I love my 968 for what it is & don't hate it for what it isn't!
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Slipping ramps is no fun. None work on alll 4 wheels of the 968. If you buy a few 12' - 2x10s and use two as your base, you can cut sections to match up with your wheel base. Make the cut sections stair-stepped and nail them to the base 2x12 in the front. Pull the car on till it gets to the front steps and stop and put on the back steps. I had a couple dowels that hold the steps in place on the base. Crude but they worked.
I now have a lift, but the car is so low I still use 2x10s to drive on so I don't rub the lift. Hope this helps.
92 968 cab (cobalt blue/black top/grey int)
87 944S
19 Audi A6 3.0T
03 Toyota Tundra
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Not sure I'm following the question...
I use two aluminum Race Jacks ($125 each from Sears), which fit right under the front jack points, one on each side...
Front goes UP... then place a ramp under each front tire, with the "ramp" portion pointing AWAY from the car...
Lower the car... move Jacks to the rear lift points (I like to use one of those aluminum "Locks" between the Jack head and the car)...
Rear goes UP... and place two more ramps under the rear tires, again pointing AWAY from the car. Car is held between the two sets of Ramps...
I have sometimes used a small wood "chock" in front of the Front wheels, just to keep them from trying to escape down the front ramps if I over lift at the rear...
Result is about 16 clear inches of ground clearance underneath... enough for a clutch change!
If you need access to a suspension item, just put the Jack under that corner point, lift the car off the ramp at that corner, pull the wheel off, and fit a Jack Stand under the nearest secure point on the chassis... ease the car down onto the Jack Stand. Remove the Ramp. I usually leave the jack in place as a secondary precaution against weak Jack Stands!
1994 968 Coupe, Red / Cashmere/Black, 6 spd, [acronym="Limited Slip Differential"]LSD[/acronym], Part Leather, Alpine, Hidden Radar, Airbox Mod, early Engine Decore Panels, more to come!
2002 MB Silver Arrow SL500 AMG Pack, one of 750 imported.
2008 SX4 Sport, 2004 GMC XUV, 1997 Towncar, police pack sleeper.
(This post was last modified: 07-27-2007, 10:39 AM by
Darth Vadar.)
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I made a big hole in the ground from my garage. So now I have a concreet basemant. Deep enough (1 m 85 deep, 3 meters long and 1 m wide ) to walk under the car and do all of the work!!. I installed electrics etc.
It cost me 3 days to dig and to make it. After that I had to wait four long weeks for drying the concreet.
Ritchie owner of a '92 Coupe Tiptronic with the following standardoptions: C00, 030, 139, 249, 258, 340, 383, 387, 403, 418, 454, 490, 494, 567, 573, 650, 690, 14951
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I hired four Sherpas last spring. They live in the garage (a very quiet people with fastidious personal habits). Whenever I need access to the underside of the car they just hoist it up over their heads. It's the damnest thing you ever saw - I'll try to post some pictures later.
Their current 'hoisting' record is 1 hour 37 minutes. Apparently, with Raleigh NC at virtually sea-level and the 968 fairly lightweight at 3,000 pounds, this sort of exertion is nothing for these guys. So far I have barely tapped their potential.
I am looking into franchise opportunities.
Ralph
2002 Carrera Coupe - Orient Red Metallic
'93 968 Coupe Amazon Green Metallic w/airbox mod (sold 2009)
'89 944 S2 (gone to live in the Midwest)
'77 911S (RIP)
And a whole bunch of VWs over the years...
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I bought a 2500 pound, 440 volt 3 phase electromagnet I've suspended from the roof of the garage with bungee cords. Got it at a garage sale at the NASA warehouse. At full power it levitates the napa968 about 12 inches off the slab. A few minor side effects: had to hide the power bill from the missus last month it was $600, my neighbors' lights dim when I crank that baby up, and I'm losing more hair than usual, but the view from under the car is amazing . . . .
Amazon Green Cab Vintage 1993
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Dynamite will get her up off the ground pretty high as well. Its cheap too. Just get your work done really fast.
I love my 968 for what it is & don't hate it for what it isn't!
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I'm so glad a few of you finally responded. I laid that (I thought) funny egg and it just sat there for a couple of days.
I started to worry that I was going to get hate mail from Nepal and wake up to parka-wearing grizzled little men with giant packs on their backs protesting outside my house.
Ralph
2002 Carrera Coupe - Orient Red Metallic
'93 968 Coupe Amazon Green Metallic w/airbox mod (sold 2009)
'89 944 S2 (gone to live in the Midwest)
'77 911S (RIP)
And a whole bunch of VWs over the years...
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Ralph, I couldn't resist. I laughed my a*& off when I read your post. I understand your concern, a few tipsy astronauts showed up at my house saying they wanted their magnet back.
Amazon Green Cab Vintage 1993
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<img src="/forum/images/smilies/968/tongue.gif" class="smilie" alt="" />
What a great thread. can we make it a sticky and title it Example of thread gone bad?
I love my 968 for what it is & don't hate it for what it isn't!