Danase said:
For you guys that do a lot of motorcycle work, what sort of jack are you using? I need to pull the tires on my cruiser and don't have a jack. I had a set of stands for my sportbikes but those won't work on a cruiser.
Thanks!
I used an imported jack from Sam's Club for a while and never felt real good about it. Comparable to the ones at Sears and Harbor Freight, a bottle jack eventually is going to let you... and your bike, down. Narrow footprint, cheezy hardware, not exactly want you want when you're struggling and wiggling things around trying to get an axle through when it's fully extended.
After seeing some techs use one I ended up with a much stouter lift from a Harley dealer. About 3 times as expensive as the el cheapos but it's correspondingly better construction and more secure. Instead of a bottle jack it uses a hand crank and mechanical lifting rather than pneumatic. Nothing to ever leak and all the nuts and bolts are Grade 8.
I don't know what you've got to lift or how high you need to go... you could very well get away with the cheap stuff. I'm lifting a 900 lb dresser and to get the rear tire from under the fender it has to go ALL the way up and stay there while I'm sitting on the floor trying to hold things in place while wiggling the axle through. I run a ratcheting tie down through the frame and tighten the bike against the lift before I raise it..... keeps things from moving around.
Pulling both wheels at once is a scary proposition with some of those narrow-footprint lifts. If I'm pulling one or the other I position the lift so it'll stay stable when the load shifts as the weight of a wheel is removed. Pull both wheels and if you center the lift it's going to want to tip as soon as the first wheel comes off.
What you need.. what *I* need, is a Handy table lift with a drop-a-way panel in the back. Just support the back of the bike with a small jack while you drop the rear wheel down the way the pros do. Kinda pricey for the part-time, shadetree wrench though.
TL