Tubalcain is a wealth of information. In my opinion he's a national treasure. I hope somebody is archiving these videos for future generations to benefit from.
Brings back memories. My grandfather who was born in 1924 bought a lot of tools from Montgomery Ward including an old style rear engine riding mower. He loved M.W. and Sears and would use any excuse to go there. Great video Mr.Lyle, thanks!
I absolutely loved this video. Very good explanation, enjoyable narration as far as content, thoroughness and style. It's as if an engineer and a mechanic had a baby who was given up for adoption and raised by Walter Cronkite and had the best qualities of all of them. Thank you for doing these videos!
You sir are a wealth of knowledge! I have only just discovered your channel, to see about repairing a bottle jack project with my kids. I can't wait to sift through these videos. Like listening to my late father-in-law's wisdom on general tools and how they work. Thank you for making these videos!
I found a big gigantic bottle jack had no idea how to get it to work I've been able to fix floor jacks but not a bottle jack this video is one of the best videos I've ever seen very well done very well executed I love it gentleman is very well spoken thank you very much for this I appreciate it definition of striving and hope you got more videos for different things
Mr Pete, As with all good teachers you make learning both interesting and fun. That must have come in handy over your career teaching young short attention spans. I had an industrial arts teacher years ago who you remind me of. I still remember his interesting demonstrations. Thanks again for sharing your vast knowledge. Hope you never retire from your second career.
Another entertaining and educational vijeo. I like how the ENGINEERS increase production by doing things that no one who actually uses the product would do. Saved a penny, got a bonus!!
What timing! Been wondering how the jack was put together and now I know. Matter of fact, watched it twice and am going to change the jack oil to see if I can get the jack to raise a bit higher AND to see if any water has contaminated the jack oil that has been in it since Methusala was a tyke! ALWAYS watching your videos to the very end since you are super thorough and leave nothing to the imagination ... plain and simple! Thank you, John
I remember that when the bottle jack was lowered and the clearance under the vehicle became very shallow it was very easy to drag the jack out with the jackhandle because it slotted perfectly into the pinned valve. It also did not slip of when you opened or closed the valve. Those were the days.
Hi Mr Pete I'm glad I'm watching this video i have a old 20 ton from before there was HF stores . i got it from a import tool store i think its made in Taiwan and all the impact sockets i bought are made in Taiwan very good . back to the jack about 5 years ago it quit working and i am hopping that i can remove the check ball valve assy. out and try to fix it . Thanks JM
This video should've been titled... **"How a Jack Works FOR DUMMIES DUMMIES(double dummies intended)"** there is no way that even the most thickest headed dude would not understand how these gentleman explained it. Great Job SIR... !!
Thank you for this. Grateful for your skillfulness with teaching. I now know the problem with my jack. The ball bearing blew out when my girlfriend accidentally removed the bleeder valve and then I made the mistake of compressing the ram (to free up the jack from beneath the car) before screwing the bleeder back in. Must have spit it out roadside in Death Valley. (Took an old pushrod through my tire!) Live and learn!!!
Splendid! My first hydraulic Jack replaced a mechanical screw Jack operated by 1/2 inch square rod, easy to knock over and hard to operate. Hydraulic Jack transformational, till they, as you noted, removed most of the jackable points, so now back to screw scissors Jack that is great till jacking point corrodes. Find keeping newer cars running is much harder than older ones.
Great stuff! You young "men" with your v-necks and your latte's and VW Golfs and I-phones can learn something from this guy! One look at the hands tells you all you need to know! How a Torque Wrench works would be skookum!!
Hi, after bleeding and filling ect a floor jack, when i pump the handle down the lifting arm raises but then lowers with the handle going down, SO i guessing one of the little ball bearings is slipping or damaged and letting fluid pass?
I just came across a 20t hydraulic ram style steel bender this afternoon in the work shed, and was wondering how to fix it. Honestly, you've made the complicated simple. Thankyou. Guess why I wanted to use it? I have a tennis court, where a herd of cows went running through, and bent the pipes. Last ditch effort to salvage it before scrapping it.
Another good video, my bottle jack like I said has two balls, a small 5 mm ball goes in first then a bigger ball bearing behind it which pushes on the little one
I worked for a while in a hydraulics repair shop, and one thing I learned that should be mentioned is to NEVER use brake fluid in a jack... it will turn the seals to mush.
That's BS.First thing I do with hydrolic jacks is drain out the fluid and replace with brake fluid! And I've got a 6 ton bottle jack from 1980 still works flawlessly! Why do I use brake fluid? Have you ever tried using a hydralic jack thats been in your garage during freezing weather? Pump and pump and nothing happens because the fluid thickens rendering the jack useless. Your brakes still work in your car don't they? Of course. Brake fluid is hydralic fluid more refined. Thats all. Not going to do a thing to the seals in that jack. Brake fluid is more expensive but thats why.
I regularly rebuild pumps at work that are used for trailer and caravan jockey wheels, called a trail-a-mate if you want to check them out. Only difference, like you mention, is the power piston i will call it, comes out the bottom and is alot longer. Very simple design but very effective. great video :)
Thank you for making me feel I'm not too crazy, as my thought processes as I repair/rebuild/inspect/do all kinds of projects sound quite similar to yours, down to the reservoiahhhhhh Except yours is in a soothing Chicagese, and mine is in cynical Jersey. Your videos are great!
I agree with both of these two comments! Almost sounds like my father's generation. He fought in the second world war and grew up in NYC. Became an engineer after. Something in your voice; they just don't make em like they made you anymore unfortunately. Or at the very least, you're a rare breed now these days.
This is awesome, thanks. I unscrewed the valve on my trolley jack just a little too much and a small amount of fluid escaped. I've been a bit wary about that jack since, I didn't know if I'd compromised it in any serious way. Now I can understand it's not going to suddenly collapse because it lost a tiny amount of oil from the low pressure reservoir. It probably just won't lift as high as it did before. Thanks for taking the time to show this stuff. Good health to you.
One thing to add about (incompressible) hydraulics is that pressure x area is constant. Hence, small pressure on big area = large pressure on small area. And vice versa. So, since we humans can only exert so much pressure, we use the relative areas as a force multiplier, and are able to raise a two-ton car with a one-foot lever.
i want to thread a piece of steel round bar on top.. and use the bottle jack as a column for a drill press..is it a buttress thread used..?? i can find very little on the web.. and find very little on buttress thread taps and what size drill bit i would need.. can't find any charts.. any of u care to expound..
I found exactly what I needed to know from watching your video. Have you tried heating the base of the part you had trouble taking apart. The reason is that the manufacturer probably used red locktite which would be required under the UL testing rules. This product will actually etch the metals together the same as what happens in a disc brake bolts as a requirement for safety ect. And sometimes will actually destroy the two parts if unsealed.
Hey Mr. Pete I have a thought on how to get that stubborn part off?.... Could you bore out a piece of metal to the OD of the piece you want to remove . cut a kerf length wise . Press it on . and then use the pipe wrench ?
There is still newer ones with the pin instead of the flattend ones I like the pin ones with the slot in the handle better used them alot setting up twelve wide before . then we switched to the rubber airbag Jacks there awesome ever seen them ?
Curious What would cause this type of jack to need oil added to it? (Likely the age of that oil can suggests the answer is "not much would cause that!")
Mr. Pete, great video. I have an issue with my bottle jack and I can't get it to work. I'm just wondering if you repair other people's bottle jacks, with a fee, and return them.
That plug screw is one of the few applications where I can imagine using a hammer drill (not an impact driver) to put the screw in in the factory. It would set the taper in place snugly and the threads holding it in place would be secondary.
Mr Pete, can you please do a video on refilling a floor jack? Someone pulled my whole hand out and lost all my fluid. I'd like to fix it and not have to spend $150 on a new one since this is only 6 months old. Thanks for the video and I just subscribed to your channel. Happy New Year
Another great tutorial. I have a question about maybe modifying a hand pump bottle jack to work off of an external hydraulic pump of sorts ...maybe an air hydraulic pump. Could you drain the oil on the bottle jack and tap in at the pressure release point of the jack. The hydraulic reservoir from the pump then is used for the fluid etc. This is how porta power pumps work I think. Your thoughts if you have the time. I know the PSI has to be taken into consideration as well but in the theory would this not work?
8:25 In fact, when pumping, oil flows from the reservoir to the cylinder which creates vacuum in the reservoir. That's why you leave some air in the reservoir. 12:38 These valves operate by pressure/underpressure and oil flow not gravity. People modify these bottle jacks so that they can work in the reverse position. The pump and valves do not require any modifications. 17:55 The copper wire does not show the passage to the cylinder, which must exist, otherwise the oil could not flow from the cylinder to the reservoir.
Can you give me the brand or manufacture of the jack you used in this video. I am working on a long ram 8 ton it has the same parts as yours just larger diameters. My name plate is faded but I can read a model # 339 and made in Taiwan. It is the same color as yours.
We had a loaded tractor trailer full of grain i believe it was wheat. We noticed it had a flat tire of the bead so we had to jack it up. I grabbed a 6x6 and a an 8x8 to get our 50 ton jack under it. I didn't realize it but other guy had let the air out of the airbags. That meant instead of spreading out the load between the axles because it has an equalizer i was trying to jack up the whole 35 ton load. so while i was jacking i was hearing wood crack. And it wasn't going up when i looked under there (it is air over hydraulic) those blocks were completely unrecognizable haha! Use steel blocks when jacking up heavy loads.
Great video, very informative as usual, however I would like to point two things. 1. When adding oil to the jack always have the ram/piston in the fully down/retracted position, if not you will overfill the jack. 2. After you lift the car to where you want it ALWAYS put safety stands under the car, in the proper place. NEVER get under the car with just the jack holding it up, if it slips out of place R.I.P.
Thank you, Pete. As always, and I DO mean always, I enjoyed every particle of your presentation. My only lament is that, although you mentioned the need to bleed, you didn't demonstrate HOW to bleed a jack, which would have been the icing on the cake. Mark in Modesto
+Mark Spencer Most hyd jacks have a bleed port at the top of the cylinder to bleed the air out and prevent over extending the ram. To bleed, just pump a few strokes after reaching the top. If it doesn't have a port then just extend the ram, turn the jack upside down, open valve and collapse it. Mike (o\!/o)
Why does my bottle jack not work if laid horizontal, vertical it works. Have a project where I need the the bottle jack to be horizontal. Can anyone help
because of the way the fluid is situated, you have to keep the jack in an upright/vertical position. They won't work in the horizontal position. A solution to this is to simply use a "Scissor Jack" instead. If you don't have access to a scissor jack, you have to find a way to separate the pump mechanism from the actual lifting mechanism. Because if you lay the jack on it's side, the fluid won't enter the hole where the pump is supposed to apply pressure. There are ways to get around this, you can do a simple google search and the information should be there.
I think the round end might be to keep the cup in place? It's exactly the same as in some modern pocket sized bicycle pumps. It's cheaper than making a thread.
This video is pretty coincidental. I was doing a little spring cleaning around my yard yesterday, and found a bottle jack that does not raise when you actuate it.. Looking at various videos to see how they work- I come upon your video which coincidentally you are using the same, identical jack to the one I found under a maple tree, under a inverted 2gallon bucket..
Tadpoles!? Well it has got to be dirty water instead of oil doesn't it? I can't believe they're in there. Wonder if its mosquito larvae?? They lay anyplace its got some moisture.
yup rescue these too peoplw throw away...out of fluid or o - ring dried out thanks again video...another favorite are old screw jacks..guy was amazed little jack picked up his 4 weel drive
one thing i want to add to this, if you are gonna open the rubber cap to fill it up, be careful and use safety glasses because if there is a pressure inside then it will spit oil out under pressure, so be careful...
I am surprised to see that the neoprene cup at the end of the piston is capable to withstand all that pressure without breaking or leaking the oil through.
This is actually one of the better videos of jack repair on RUclips that I have seen.
Thank you very much
Mr Pete, you are a real treasure. RUclips, the internet in general, and our US educational system sure needs more like you.
Amen to that!!
Tubalcain is a wealth of information. In my opinion he's a national treasure. I hope somebody is archiving these videos for future generations to benefit from.
As Peter Crenshaw, from the Three Investigators, would say:” I’ll buy a double helping of that”
Brings back memories. My grandfather who was born in 1924 bought a lot of tools from Montgomery Ward including an old style rear engine riding mower. He loved M.W. and Sears and would use any excuse to go there. Great video Mr.Lyle, thanks!
I absolutely loved this video. Very good explanation, enjoyable narration as far as content, thoroughness and style. It's as if an engineer and a mechanic had a baby who was given up for adoption and raised by Walter Cronkite and had the best qualities of all of them. Thank you for doing these videos!
Thank you very much, you put a smile on my face
these videos are very useful, Mr Pete. keep them coming. learnt lots.
You sir are a wealth of knowledge! I have only just discovered your channel, to see about repairing a bottle jack project with my kids. I can't wait to sift through these videos. Like listening to my late father-in-law's wisdom on general tools and how they work. Thank you for making these videos!
Absolutely love that you take the time to produce these videos. I hope there are kids out there watching and learning what it is to be a man.
Thank you, I'm glad you like them
What Makes It Work is my favorite series of yours. Rebuilding a jack is on my list of things to do so I was pretty excited to see this video. Thanks!
Enjoyed the video. Now I know how how it works. He could be the next Mr. Wizard on TV!
Thanks
I always wondered exactly how these things work. Thanks for doing this series.
You are providing some vital information for my 3rd year university engineering project. Thank you for your investigation and your insight!
👍👍
Finally a video from someone who actually knows what they are talking about.
Pretty neat way to show the passages! Thanks for thinking of it.
👍
I found a big gigantic bottle jack had no idea how to get it to work I've been able to fix floor jacks but not a bottle jack this video is one of the best videos I've ever seen very well done very well executed I love it gentleman is very well spoken thank you very much for this I appreciate it definition of striving and hope you got more videos for different things
Thank you very much, I’m glad you like the video. I really worked hard on making that one
Mr Pete, As with all good teachers you make learning both interesting and fun. That must have come in handy over your career teaching young short attention spans. I had an industrial arts teacher years ago who you remind me of. I still remember his interesting demonstrations. Thanks again for sharing your vast knowledge. Hope you never retire from your second career.
I tried to get into shop classes but they would not let us girls in at that time. I HAD to take home economics instead. 🤬
Another entertaining and educational vijeo. I like how the ENGINEERS increase production by doing things that no one who actually uses the product would do. Saved a penny, got a bonus!!
Great explanation. Many thanks for your tuition from the UK
Thanks for the cool lesson. Is on to part two!
What timing! Been wondering how the jack was put together and now I know. Matter of fact, watched it twice and am going to change the jack oil to see if I can get the jack to raise a bit higher AND to see if any water has contaminated the jack oil that has been in it since Methusala was a tyke! ALWAYS watching your videos to the very end since you are super thorough and leave nothing to the imagination ... plain and simple! Thank you, John
I really enjoyed this set of videos.thanks very much.
Wonderful video!! Thank you for going so far in depth!!!
I remember that when the bottle jack was lowered and the clearance under the vehicle became very shallow it was very easy to drag the jack out with the jackhandle because it slotted perfectly into the pinned valve. It also did not slip of when you opened or closed the valve. Those were the days.
Hennie van der Westhuizen .
The little man and I enjoy these videos.
+MrHevyshevy Kinda odd to watch this with your johnson hanging out.. But hey, different strokes for different folks!
Hi Mr Pete I'm glad I'm watching this video i have a old 20 ton from before there was HF stores . i got it from a import tool store
i think its made in Taiwan and all the impact sockets i bought are made in Taiwan very good . back to the jack about 5 years ago it quit working and i am hopping that i can remove the check ball valve assy. out and try to fix it . Thanks JM
👍👍
This video should've been titled... **"How a Jack Works FOR DUMMIES DUMMIES(double dummies intended)"** there is no way that even the most thickest headed dude would not understand how these gentleman explained it.
Great Job SIR... !!
Thanks
Thank you for this. Grateful for your skillfulness with teaching. I now know the problem with my jack. The ball bearing blew out when my girlfriend accidentally removed the bleeder valve and then I made the mistake of compressing the ram (to free up the jack from beneath the car) before screwing the bleeder back in. Must have spit it out roadside in Death Valley. (Took an old pushrod through my tire!) Live and learn!!!
Good explanation on how bottle jack works.
Thanks
Very well explained !
Very thorough and well explanation! Thanks!!
Thanks for the breakdown and pro explanation, now i can head out to the shop and deal with my hydraulic press with some sort of confidence 👍
Good luck!
Splendid! My first hydraulic Jack replaced a mechanical screw Jack operated by 1/2 inch square rod, easy to knock over and hard to operate. Hydraulic Jack transformational, till they, as you noted, removed most of the jackable points, so now back to screw scissors Jack that is great till jacking point corrodes. Find keeping newer cars running is much harder than older ones.
Great stuff! You young "men" with your v-necks and your latte's and VW Golfs and I-phones can learn something from this guy! One look at the hands tells you all you need to know!
How a Torque Wrench works would be skookum!!
Hi, after bleeding and filling ect a floor jack, when i pump the handle down the lifting arm raises but then lowers with the handle going down, SO i guessing one of the little ball bearings is slipping or damaged and letting fluid pass?
I just came across a 20t hydraulic ram style steel bender this afternoon in the work shed, and was wondering how to fix it. Honestly, you've made the complicated simple. Thankyou.
Guess why I wanted to use it? I have a tennis court, where a herd of cows went running through, and bent the pipes. Last ditch effort to salvage it before scrapping it.
👍👍
Thank you sir. Much easier to fix things when you know how they work.
Very good explained !
Thanks
Another good video, my bottle jack like I said has two balls, a small 5 mm ball goes in first then a bigger ball bearing behind it which pushes on the little one
I worked for a while in a hydraulics repair shop, and one thing I learned that should be mentioned is to NEVER use brake fluid in a jack... it will turn the seals to mush.
Well thanks that is helpful to me. I will fight the temptation next time
That's BS.First thing I do with hydrolic jacks is drain out the fluid and replace with brake fluid! And I've got a 6 ton bottle jack from 1980 still works flawlessly! Why do I use brake fluid? Have you ever tried using a hydralic jack thats been in your garage during freezing weather? Pump and pump and nothing happens because the fluid thickens rendering the jack useless. Your brakes still work in your car don't they? Of course. Brake fluid is hydralic fluid more refined. Thats all. Not going to do a thing to the seals in that jack. Brake fluid is more expensive but thats why.
Can you use transmission fluid also?
@@applepoop10 Not recomended, but if you really need the jack working and that's all you have.
thanks for taking the time to make the video, found it very informative and interesting,
Awesome job thank you very much
That was fun and informative. Thank you.
Great video, lots of good info. Thanks for sharing
I regularly rebuild pumps at work that are used for trailer and caravan jockey wheels, called a trail-a-mate if you want to check them out. Only difference, like you mention, is the power piston i will call it, comes out the bottom and is alot longer. Very simple design but very effective. great video :)
Thank you for making me feel I'm not too crazy, as my thought processes as I repair/rebuild/inspect/do all kinds of projects sound quite similar to yours, down to the reservoiahhhhhh
Except yours is in a soothing Chicagese, and mine is in cynical Jersey.
Your videos are great!
Thank you very much
you remind me of my grandfather, and that makes sense because he was a heavy machinery mechanic. you too even sound similar
Thanks
imthemistermaster actually he sounds like the Grandfather I would have wanted. I love videos like these. Subscribed!
I agree with both of these two comments! Almost sounds like my father's generation. He fought in the second world war and grew up in NYC. Became an engineer after. Something in your voice; they just don't make em like they made you anymore unfortunately. Or at the very least, you're a rare breed now these days.
This is awesome, thanks. I unscrewed the valve on my trolley jack just a little too much and a small amount of fluid escaped. I've been a bit wary about that jack since, I didn't know if I'd compromised it in any serious way. Now I can understand it's not going to suddenly collapse because it lost a tiny amount of oil from the low pressure reservoir. It probably just won't lift as high as it did before. Thanks for taking the time to show this stuff. Good health to you.
How do you get the piston or ram to go back down after raising it?
Open the valve, and push on the ram
One thing to add about (incompressible) hydraulics is that pressure x area is constant. Hence, small pressure on big area = large pressure on small area. And vice versa. So, since we humans can only exert so much pressure, we use the relative areas as a force multiplier, and are able to raise a two-ton car with a one-foot lever.
i want to thread a piece of steel round bar on top.. and use the bottle jack as a column for a drill press..is it a buttress thread used..?? i can find very little on the web.. and find very little on buttress thread taps and what size drill bit i would need.. can't find any charts.. any of u care to expound..
I found exactly what I needed to know from watching your video. Have you tried heating the base of the part you had trouble taking apart. The reason is that the manufacturer probably used red locktite which would be required under the UL testing rules. This product will actually etch the metals together the same as what happens in a disc brake bolts as a requirement for safety ect. And sometimes will actually destroy the two parts if unsealed.
Nice to know I'm not the only lunatic that welds those handles together.
or replace it with a piece of galvanized pipe with one end smashed!
really really good video. how the realise valve makes de jacket go down?
Hey Mr. Pete I have a thought on how to get that stubborn part off?.... Could you bore out a piece of metal to the OD of the piece you want to remove . cut a kerf length wise . Press it on . and then use the pipe wrench ?
There is still newer ones with the pin instead of the flattend ones I like the pin ones with the slot in the handle better used them alot setting up twelve wide before . then we switched to the rubber airbag Jacks there awesome ever seen them ?
thank you sir for sharing.. interesting as always...
thank you for sheering this Mr ,what I want to make is a diesel injector pop tester .
Yo! Thanks you for this video. I like allot of your videos. You'd be a good professor.
Great videos, I will keep watching, thank you.
Curious What would cause this type of jack to need oil added to it? (Likely the age of that oil can suggests the answer is "not much would cause that!")
It leaks a little
Mr. Pete, great video. I have an issue with my bottle jack and I can't get it to work. I'm just wondering if you repair other people's bottle jacks, with a fee, and return them.
no
Top notch, you speak a bit slowly but you know what your talking about so I'll let it slide. I'm a jack expert now thanks!
👍
That plug screw is one of the few applications where I can imagine using a hammer drill (not an impact driver) to put the screw in in the factory. It would set the taper in place snugly and the threads holding it in place would be secondary.
Mr Pete, can you please do a video on refilling a floor jack? Someone pulled my whole hand out and lost all my fluid. I'd like to fix it and not have to spend $150 on a new one since this is only 6 months old. Thanks for the video and I just subscribed to your channel. Happy New Year
The pad doesn't need a swivel like a C-clamp. C-clamps rotate under pressure. The bottle jack is adjusted before pressure is applied.
Another great tutorial. I have a question about maybe modifying a hand pump bottle jack to work off of an external hydraulic pump of sorts ...maybe an air hydraulic pump. Could you drain the oil on the bottle jack and tap in at the pressure release point of the jack. The hydraulic reservoir from the pump then is used for the fluid etc. This is how porta power pumps work I think. Your thoughts if you have the time. I know the PSI has to be taken into consideration as well but in the theory would this not work?
8:25 In fact, when pumping, oil flows from the reservoir to the cylinder which creates vacuum in the reservoir. That's why you leave some air in the reservoir.
12:38 These valves operate by pressure/underpressure and oil flow not gravity. People modify these bottle jacks so that they can work in the reverse position. The pump and valves do not require any modifications.
17:55 The copper wire does not show the passage to the cylinder, which must exist, otherwise the oil could not flow from the cylinder to the reservoir.
very interesting. thanks.
Tadpoles compress fine but the decompression is a little hard on them.
😂 they seem to love jack oil
Lee Ludtke me only question is how they got in jack?
@@taylormick4374 As explained in the video, some frog didn't clean the cylinder out properly.
If you take a look at a common floor jack, there is a bottle jack laying horizontally providing the force.
+Jason Moonsmith So true-I should have mentioned that
Can you give me the brand or manufacture of the jack you used in this video. I am working on a long ram 8 ton it has the same parts as yours just larger diameters. My name plate is faded but I can read a model # 339 and made in Taiwan. It is the same color as yours.
I have no idea, it was an import. I threw it away along time ago right after I made the video
Thanks sharing That Pascale was a very interesting guy for his time
Great video!
Thanks
Where can get that small ball ?
We had a loaded tractor trailer full of grain i believe it was wheat. We noticed it had a flat tire of the bead so we had to jack it up. I grabbed a 6x6 and a an 8x8 to get our 50 ton jack under it. I didn't realize it but other guy had let the air out of the airbags. That meant instead of spreading out the load between the axles because it has an equalizer i was trying to jack up the whole 35 ton load. so while i was jacking i was hearing wood crack. And it wasn't going up when i looked under there (it is air over hydraulic) those blocks were completely unrecognizable haha! Use steel blocks when jacking up heavy loads.
👍👍
THANK YOU...for sharing.
Great video, very informative as usual, however I would like to point two things.
1. When adding oil to the jack always have the ram/piston in the fully down/retracted position, if not you will overfill the jack.
2. After you lift the car to where you want it ALWAYS put safety stands under the car, in the proper place. NEVER get under the car with just the jack holding it up, if it slips out of place R.I.P.
Thank you, Pete. As always, and I DO mean always, I enjoyed every particle of your presentation. My only lament is that, although you mentioned the need to bleed, you didn't demonstrate HOW to bleed a jack, which would have been the icing on the cake. Mark in Modesto
+Mark Spencer Most hyd jacks have a bleed port at the top of the cylinder to bleed the air out and prevent over extending the ram. To bleed, just pump a few strokes after reaching the top. If it doesn't have a port then just extend the ram, turn the jack upside down, open valve and collapse it.
Mike (o\!/o)
Thank you,
very nice explanation thank you regards
The ball on the end of the pumping piston provides a stop in order to prevent the seal from being crushed or damaged.
Why does my bottle jack not work if laid horizontal, vertical it works. Have a project where I need the the bottle jack to be horizontal.
Can anyone help
because of the way the fluid is situated, you have to keep the jack in an upright/vertical position. They won't work in the horizontal position. A solution to this is to simply use a "Scissor Jack" instead. If you don't have access to a scissor jack, you have to find a way to separate the pump mechanism from the actual lifting mechanism. Because if you lay the jack on it's side, the fluid won't enter the hole where the pump is supposed to apply pressure. There are ways to get around this, you can do a simple google search and the information should be there.
You obviously must be or have been a mechanical engineer in your career. You explained it is an engineer would’ve explained it great job!
No, I was a teacher. However I did start out as a mechanical engineer in college
I think the round end might be to keep the cup in place? It's exactly the same as in some modern pocket sized bicycle pumps. It's cheaper than making a thread.
aserta - Easier to slip the cup over a rounded ball for installation without tearing.
My old jack still has the pin style valve
Its like watching AvE without the swearing!
+Bill T True-you just made me laugh!!
+Bill T Or Chooching.
All vice without the dick
This video is gold. Subbed
thanks for this video. I learned a lot
Pete wear can buy parts for theses
This video is pretty coincidental. I was doing a little spring cleaning around my yard yesterday, and found a bottle jack that does not raise when you actuate it.. Looking at various videos to see how they work- I come upon your video which coincidentally you are using the same, identical jack to the one I found under a maple tree, under a inverted 2gallon bucket..
👍👍
Great looking video content. Assume you did a great deal of your very own coding.
Are you on the Square?
Tadpoles!? Well it has got to be dirty water instead of oil doesn't it?
I can't believe they're in there. Wonder if its mosquito larvae??
They lay anyplace its got some moisture.
Wonderful QUIET !
Nice video. Subbed.👍😃
Thanks
Very nice video
yup rescue these too peoplw throw away...out of fluid or o - ring dried out thanks again video...another favorite are old screw jacks..guy was amazed little jack picked up his 4 weel drive
"Monkey Wards"....Gawd I havent heard that name in a long time.
Life is like a box of bottle Jacks that we can fix if we like.
one thing i want to add to this, if you are gonna open the rubber cap to fill it up, be careful and use safety glasses because if there is a pressure inside then it will spit oil out under pressure, so be careful...
There is no pressure in there. That's why they can get by with a pushed in rubber plug.
+Rod Dahl There can be pressure if over filled, makes quite a mess.
I am surprised to see that the neoprene cup at the end of the piston is capable to withstand all that pressure without breaking or leaking the oil through.