View Full Version : Your jacking procedure
Magraith
20th June 2013, 09:15 PM
I have a lightweight trolly jack that does not have a huge amount of height on it.
Just wondering if there is anything to be aware of whilst jacking? The guy down at the local tyre shop reckons you lower the car to access mode and lock it out then jack up on the "dedicated jacking" points?
This seems to contradict the method in the boot instructions which ask you to put the car in the "highest" mode then jack? Tried this and my jack ran out off height.. Appreciate any advice.
101RRS
20th June 2013, 09:24 PM
Raise the car as high as possible and then jack - saves a lot of jacking. If you lower to access height you will have a lot, lot, lot of jacking to do.
Locking at access height may stop height movements when driving slowly but does not actually lock the suspension as such. Jacking from that position means the body will go up and up using up all the downward travel of the suspension before the wheel lifts off.
Garry
Graeme
21st June 2013, 09:01 AM
At home I use a light-weight trolley jack on concrete under the lower shock mount in the wishbones with the vehicle at normal height and the main suspension fuse removed.
Steve223
21st June 2013, 05:00 PM
sorry to hijack, I want to buy a trolley jack but most jacks are just 1.5 tons do you have a +3 Ton jack or use one with less capacity?
the +3 ton one cost over $600 so trying to avoid that
WhiteD3
21st June 2013, 05:14 PM
I follow the manual. Put the car in off road height, open the driver's door, chock the wheels and use a 3 stage bottle jack to lift her up at the jacking points. I had some adapters made to allow the head of the jack to lock into the chassis at the jacking point.
Re the 3 ton issue; you are not jacking 3 ton, just some of it.
discotwinturbo
21st June 2013, 05:37 PM
sorry to hijack, I want to buy a trolley jack but most jacks are just 1.5 tons do you have a +3 Ton jack or use one with less capacity?
the +3 ton one cost over $600 so trying to avoid that
I use an old1.8tonne trolley jack.
Works well.
Brett....
discotwinturbo
21st June 2013, 05:39 PM
I follow the manual. Put the car in off road height, open the driver's door
I followed that initially but with the car hissing once you start to wind up was not comforting. I know when it hisses once, it won't do it on the next wheel.
Pull the fuse and no hissing.....which I hope is a good thing.
Brett....
JamesH
23rd June 2013, 02:16 PM
Does the manual say where and which fuse to pull? I'm off on a long trip and better familiarise myself.
Graeme
23rd June 2013, 03:11 PM
Its the 20A engine bay suspension fuse. For a D4 its the 3rd from the front in the outside row. This is the primary suspension system supply and is the only one used to operate the valve solenoids. The other engine bay suspension fuse (5A) is only a feedback from the compressor supply relay so that the suspension ecu knows that the relay's contacts are closed, with the smallest standard fuse (5A) case of a wiring short between the fuse panel and the suspension ecu. The cabin 5A fuse is an ignition supply which will supply power to the suspension ecu if the primary fuse is out but then only used to report a suspension system failure and generate constant beeping to annoy anyone in the vehicle.
jonesy63
23rd June 2013, 03:27 PM
sorry to hijack, I want to buy a trolley jack but most jacks are just 1.5 tons do you have a +3 Ton jack or use one with less capacity?
the +3 ton one cost over $600 so trying to avoid that
Steve - check out the Repco catalogue. I got the Pro Lift 2000kg model when it was on sale for about $89 (it is in the catalogue at the moment for $129). They have a smaller 2000kg one there for $89 - that might even do you.
Cheers,
Rob
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