A big thank you to everyone who suggested this topic! Here are the links to the products I reviewed. More details in the video description. Looking forward to reading your comments and video ideas!! Best regards and thank you, Todd BiSupply: amzn.to/3M4FpIa Liekumm: amzn.to/3M3S7ap M Auto: amzn.to/3YMAuUa Black Widow: amzn.to/4cpqhQt Vowagh: amzn.to/3X3HxGt RhinoRamp: amzn.to/3X5ZpRk Eastwood: amzn.to/4fIcjft Petersen: amzn.to/3yO32lh MaxxHaul: amzn.to/3Z4ndGH Pittsburgh Plastic and Steel: Available at Harbor Freight
Personally ive never tried ramps o a concrete floor. always dirt or gravel. i cant believe how much slipping ya got goin on ! Crazy! .. i have pretty old standard american steel ramps. maybe 30 years old now?. they all look sort of rusty at this point but have never shown signs of buckling or stress, (cars and small trucks only. no tractors)
How about a "keeping them honest" series where you test the exact same products from years ago to see if they still perform as well today. I believe they degrade in quality once they achieve a name for themselves.
I would re do the test with the hydraulic ram. The actual contact area of a tire is very small. I would recreate the actual contact patch area for the force test. The plate used was far too big to simulate the actual tire load patch.
They all look the same , but have varying levels of performance, likely due to the grade of polyethylene used, the placement of rubber stoppers and the internal member thickness….so just because they are black and plastic they are not all the same
@@christisking7778I believe its about its self weight. I have four 2x12 with various length nailed together for my truck. It’s quite heavy but no doubt it can hold tons of load.
Yes, I have jacked two cars off of people from bad ramps or ignorance. Once that was homemade by my uncle. The other incident was my best friend, who is working by himself and a wrap, failed and set the car on his chest. He survived with minor injury But he was damn lucky I was around or he was a goner. Personally, I like jackstands ramps are inherently dangerous. I don’t use them.
I have the rhino ramps, I got a piece of low pile height carpet, and literally bolted it to the ramps. So, you drive up on the carpet first, and then there is no way for the ramp to slip whatsoever.
right I'm so paranoid, I use ramps as primary lift if I can, then jackstands, jack for extra support, and fuckit I'm throwing a wheel under there as well after I take it off. Maybe its overkill, but I am using at least three of these anytime I'm actually under the car. I would much rather be redundant than dead
Scrap Framing lumber and nails is a lot less expensive, can be thrown away, and can be built in only a few minutes. But to be fair I don't travel with ramps so It's not a fair comparison
Same here, I do agree the SOBs slip WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY too much even with rough concrete and a FWD Honda helping them stay put. That being said I'm glad to know they'll at least still suspend the vehicle flawlessly once I DO have it up, lol
I noticed that too. I felt like those Vowagh are basically like jack plus jack stands, and without the pins, he was just testing the stability of the jack alone.
If you are going to use them on concrete you need to put a piece of carpet under each one so the tire hits the carpet first and they will not move!It’s easiest to use them on sloping down hill ground!
It would be nice to include in the test homemade wooden ramps. I'd like to see how DIY ramps hold up. Sure, there's variability, but a generic angled stack of wood would be fairly universal.
I use permanent markers a lot one issue I have is ink seeping into a plastic surface and then it becomes not legible this would take a long time to test
You will still be featuring tests with that old Buick 20 years from now. Those things seem to run forever. I suggest cooler testing. Which one keeps ice the longest.
I know they are VERRRRRY expensive, but if you can swing it, there are NO better ramps than "Race Ramps". They have been the best bar none, I just wish they were more affordable. 🚗🇺🇸
That's actually a real good idea with the T shirts! My dad has a similar set and always had to place 2x4s against a wall to hold them while driving up.
I use Race Ramps sold by Summit. They’re made of a plastic foam material. Sounds crazy but they’re ultra strong and very light weight. I trust them. Expensive but worth it in my opinion.
Yeah it is crazy how much weight you can support when you maximize surface area. That's why I think a few cracked under the tractor test because a rib on the tread hit a weak spot.
Probably all come from the same factory with different brands slapped on them. I'm sure making an injection mold that size isn't cheap, so they try to sell more that way.
I've got a set that's about 30 years old Don't really trust them and the angle they are sat at won't let my all my cars get up then 🤦 I think I've kept them as door stops 😂
It's the flip side for me as far as trust. Mine are around that age, but they're built like tanks, with reinforcing cross-bars that tie the bottom of the ramp to the opposite end. Not sure of the rating without digging them out of the back of the shed. My car is too low to use them (without having to stack pieces of wood to lengthen the ramps), but I doubt that they'd bat an eye at that tractor!
@@EBuff75 mine are metal and were great for my mk3 fiesta, but for anything else they aren't plus modern cars are now so much heavier i used a 2.5 ton jack as my 2 t one struggles
Yes, I've never heard of that approach to getting more grip before, and I am curious whether it's a common trick or a new idea. But the rubber welcome mat idea seems to be more practical anyway.
Personally use Rhino Max Ramps. Love them a ton, but I don't have a smooth concrete floor like that. Easily holds up a Ram 2500 with a Cummins diesel. (Around 9000lbs)
Make your own with 2x10 lumber 8 ft long. Cut 25”, 23”, 21”, 19” and 8” vertical piece for the back stop… the stack will be 6” tall. Stack them, glue and nail them… can add carpet on bottom or soft rubber… they will hold more weight than any of these tested ones. And much cheaper too. Can make longer also with 10ft or 12ft long 2x10. Throw a rope handle on them and they will be easy to move around and store. They may weight 25Lb but use your muscles… mama didn’t raise no sissy… they will last forever, you can even coat them with something protective if you like.
Jack and jack stands any day over these death traps...they're impossible to safely drive up on, either sliding out or with the amount of throttle you need to get up them you end up going right over the front. Most normal passenger cars they also don't fit under.
@@adamn7516 I use my in floor scissor lift these days (vid on my channel if anyone is curious, the invisible car lift)...but back when I have used ramps, they always either slid, hit the bumper (so couldn't use them), or one time as a teen a friend drove right over the front of them...I should just sell my set of ramps at this point, save the space.
I had several scary ramp experiences with a set of Rhino Ramps. They would constantly slip, no matter the surface. I figured the safest place for them was the trash & that’s where they went.
I suggest a new water bottle video using new brands like owala I only use 32 oz or higher capacity so I’d like to see how the bigger water bottles would perform
Sunscreens are toxic. Full of toxic chemicals that go straight through the skin. We are not meant to have sunscreen on us. We're meant to be in the sun
My late older brother got a 74 cougar xr7 when he was 16 ( I was 8) and used the old school metal ramps. I'd say they were much better quality than most of these, but it was super scary as a kid when your brother asked you to help him line them up and tell him when to stop. It was also in a stone driveway. It never went wrong (I like to think I was a pretty good spotter and helper for being 8), but all I would think of was if I messed this up, he was gonna run me over 😂😂😂
Even they didn't show very well in this testing, I use RinoRamps for our vehicles, on pavement (rough) and have never had any issues with them even when my 16yr old daughter puts the car or trucks on them. She was pretty scared to do it the first time and hit the stops pretty hard but all was good. One of the tips I read is to put a piece of cardboard under the leading edge of the ramp so the tire is on the cardboard then rolls onto the ramp which is also on the cardboard. It worked really good when we were on a less grippy surface.
Man this videos often highlight how little choice consumers actually have. Most of these ramps look like they came out of the same factory in china with very minor cosmetic changes.
Those riffles in the steel ramp edges make my engineer senses tingle. Luckily, they're not in the center where the peak bending is, but it's an uncontrolled fold from the design. Who's to say 1/1000 wont fold in a way that compromises that shoulder area?
When my dad taught me how to work on cars 25 years ago, he said you always use two types of support. So if you drive up a ramp, put a jack stand or two. That way if something slips / collapses / etc, you have enough time to get out.
I made my own out of 2x8s. I wonder how they would hold up to these tests. I have a video on them, DIY Car Ramps, if anyone is curious. Although, I did not do any of the testing done here.
When I was about 16 or so my dad had a set of old metal ramps probably twice my age. I went to do an oil change on my 85 Ford Crown Vic wagon. I put it on the ramps and as I was bending down to get under the drivers side ramp collapsed. I’ve been super crazy about safety ever since
A big thank you to everyone who suggested this topic! Here are the links to the products I reviewed. More details in the video description. Looking forward to reading your comments and video ideas!! Best regards and thank you, Todd
BiSupply: amzn.to/3M4FpIa
Liekumm: amzn.to/3M3S7ap
M Auto: amzn.to/3YMAuUa
Black Widow: amzn.to/4cpqhQt
Vowagh: amzn.to/3X3HxGt
RhinoRamp: amzn.to/3X5ZpRk
Eastwood: amzn.to/4fIcjft
Petersen: amzn.to/3yO32lh
MaxxHaul: amzn.to/3Z4ndGH
Pittsburgh Plastic and Steel: Available at Harbor Freight
Personally ive never tried ramps o a concrete floor. always dirt or gravel. i cant believe how much slipping ya got goin on ! Crazy! .. i have pretty old standard american steel ramps. maybe 30 years old now?. they all look sort of rusty at this point but have never shown signs of buckling or stress, (cars and small trucks only. no tractors)
Can you do air hoses in the future
How about a "keeping them honest" series where you test the exact same products from years ago to see if they still perform as well today. I believe they degrade in quality once they achieve a name for themselves.
What if you cut pieces of wood and inserted them into the bottom slots on the underside of the plastic ramps?
I would re do the test with the hydraulic ram. The actual contact area of a tire is very small. I would recreate the actual contact patch area for the force test. The plate used was far too big to simulate the actual tire load patch.
4 of the plastic ones used the exact same injection mold 🤣
I commented too soon 💀 5 ramps on 1 tool
Anything from China is going to be rebranded from the same factory 97% of the time.
I have the same set I bought at Sears 20+ years ago. Exact same mold! Still working fine with all my cars from 4X4 trucks, SUVs to economy cars.
@@adamk8376 yep. used to work for two very well known aftermarket automotive companies, and 90% of the products were just rebranded chinese stuff
@@donwyoming1936aslong as it lives inside it will last forever
Black Widow has to be one of the worst names ever for a safety product 😅
Wonder why my wife insisted I use this brand… hmmm
Martin Luther King wife was a Black Widow.
@@ReadtheBible88 Funny I've never seen a black person🤔
I like grimm reaper!
@@davidweaver2156 At least it's not Widow Maker! 😂
Is it just me or do most of those plastic MIC ramps look exactly the same?
I was thinking the same thing. Some OEM over in China is selling them to a bunch of sub-brands that are private label licensing them.
My Sears ramps from 20+ years ago are from the same mold!
They are exactly the same and probably made in the same factory just a different brand and packaging
They all look the same , but have varying levels of performance, likely due to the grade of polyethylene used, the placement of rubber stoppers and the internal member thickness….so just because they are black and plastic they are not all the same
You missed my stack of 2x6 lumber nailed together.😅
As a structural material, wood is seriously underrated. It can support some insane compression loads for it's weight.
@@maj429 seriously, why isn't that an option?
@@christisking7778I believe its about its self weight. I have four 2x12 with various length nailed together for my truck. It’s quite heavy but no doubt it can hold tons of load.
a 4 by 4 grid of 4 by 4 (I think oak) is rated for 24,000 pounds
My go to
Coolant additives test
Thank you for the video idea!
@@ProjectFarm yes...does "wetters" additives help?
Steam cleaners
Thank you for the video idea!
Yes try mean grean steem machine?
Yes, I have jacked two cars off of people from bad ramps or ignorance. Once that was homemade by my uncle. The other incident was my best friend, who is working by himself and a wrap, failed and set the car on his chest. He survived with minor injury But he was damn lucky I was around or he was a goner. Personally, I like jackstands ramps are inherently dangerous. I don’t use them.
surprised you didn't test out homemade wooden ramps made from cut up 2x6. With the price of wood, the ramps would of costed an easy grand.
Lol
I have the rhino ramps, I got a piece of low pile height carpet, and literally bolted it to the ramps. So, you drive up on the carpet first, and then there is no way for the ramp to slip whatsoever.
Thank you for sharing!
That's actually a really good idea.
It's that time again. I have some of these let's check it out.
Thank you and hope you enjoy the video!
Car Ramps are also an excellent safety backup when supporting the vehicle on jackstands.
Thank you for sharing!
right I'm so paranoid, I use ramps as primary lift if I can, then jackstands, jack for extra support, and fuckit I'm throwing a wheel under there as well after I take it off. Maybe its overkill, but I am using at least three of these anytime I'm actually under the car. I would much rather be redundant than dead
@@tennysonjames2969we should all learn from you.
ummm, not the way all of them are slipping... I have a pair of all-rubber stops that are specifically designed for that
Race Ramps. High density foam, expensive, but they do not slip.
I also only use Race Ramps. Yes they are expensive but no slipping and strong
Yup. The only way to go.
Scrap Framing lumber and nails is a lot less expensive, can be thrown away, and can be built in only a few minutes.
But to be fair I don't travel with ramps so It's not a fair comparison
Made with genuine Spray Foam hopefully for ultimate durability & utility.
I own the Rinos and have had zero issues with them. Most of the plastic Chinese ramps look like they were made at the same factory on the same line.
Thank you for sharing!
Same here, I do agree the SOBs slip WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY too much even with rough concrete and a FWD Honda helping them stay put. That being said I'm glad to know they'll at least still suspend the vehicle flawlessly once I DO have it up, lol
I’ll take my Pittsburg over the rinos any day
My Rhinos have been great for 10+ years, used on small SUV or sports cars.
Same! On anything other than flat concrete they're just fine. I've used them on FWD, RWD, 4WD vehicles with no problems, sloped driveway or otherwise!
You did the Vowagh dirty by not putting the pins in before the shake test. I bet they would've been fine if you did that
I noticed that too. I felt like those Vowagh are basically like jack plus jack stands, and without the pins, he was just testing the stability of the jack alone.
If you are going to use them on concrete you need to put a piece of carpet under each one so the tire hits the carpet first and they will not move!It’s easiest to use them on sloping down hill ground!
Thank you for sharing!
It would be nice to include in the test homemade wooden ramps. I'd like to see how DIY ramps hold up. Sure, there's variability, but a generic angled stack of wood would be fairly universal.
Yes. Mine were free. Made from bridge planks
I see a new Project Farm video, I click.
Thank you and hope you enjoy the video!
Important work! Thank you!
Thank you!
Race ramps would have been a great to see as the expensive ramps
Would love to see best permanent markers.
Thank you for the video idea!
That's a great idea
I use permanent markers a lot one issue I have is ink seeping into a plastic surface and then it becomes not legible this would take a long time to test
They are pricey but Sharpie Magnum xl writes on concrete without the tip just disintegrating.
I have the Rhino ramps. What really helped with the slipping is putting welcome mats underneath.
Thank you for sharing!
Fun testing!
What always bugs me is how narrow they are. They could/should be twice as wide
it was posted a min ago how did you watch it already? 16 mins long btw!
Great point!
All of us on the "Cool" list get it three minutes early. Didn't your link get to you?
Agreed my wheels are usually hanging off the edge and they aren't even that wide
You will still be featuring tests with that old Buick 20 years from now. Those things seem to run forever.
I suggest cooler testing. Which one keeps ice the longest.
Thank you for the video idea!
Must be the 3.8 engine.
They probably fired the engineers because they lasted so long.
Can you test different brands of lock washers
Great suggestion! Thank you
@HacksbyDad is your guy
I think almost all plastic ramps have same manufacture they just selling them under different brands
Thanks for the feedback.
I know they are VERRRRRY expensive, but if you can swing it, there are NO better ramps than "Race Ramps". They have been the best bar none, I just wish they were more affordable. 🚗🇺🇸
I Agree 💯
That's actually a real good idea with the T shirts! My dad has a similar set and always had to place 2x4s against a wall to hold them while driving up.
Thank you!
My favorite parts are when you say "we're gonna test that" and "very impressive".
Wow, these look so dangerous! Thank you for testing, so none of us have to!
I use Race Ramps sold by Summit. They’re made of a plastic foam material. Sounds crazy but they’re ultra strong and very light weight. I trust them. Expensive but worth it in my opinion.
Yeah it is crazy how much weight you can support when you maximize surface area. That's why I think a few cracked under the tractor test because a rib on the tread hit a weak spot.
LoL. Eastwood ramps are traveling Northwest.😂
Heck yeah. I have the metal ones. No good for 2wd on concrete though
Great point! Thank you
I place place grippy rubber mats under mine to keep from sliding.
Every Rhino style ramps I had cracked on me.
The design is stack-able, but yeah I can see them being weaker that way too.
Whoa, I haven't caught one this early before
Half of them look like the same product, probably made by the same Chinese factory.
Thank you for sharing!
I have never use them nor I have the car.
But I love seeing you test anything.
Thank you very much! This means a lot to me!
Is it me or does it look like all the Chinese plastic ramps are the same?
Probably all come from the same factory with different brands slapped on them. I'm sure making an injection mold that size isn't cheap, so they try to sell more that way.
2:55 The Black Widow Comment 😂😂
Can you do coolers? Love your videos!!
Thank you for the video idea!
I second coolers. One that keeps ice the longest is what I want to buy. I'll be waiting on the purchase until I watch the review.
There are many other reviews already who do side by side tests, I didn't think this is worth pf's time
@@RubyByte Good point! I do love the spin he puts on every test though.
Still have to chock the rear wheels.
I've got a set that's about 30 years old
Don't really trust them and the angle they are sat at won't let my all my cars get up then 🤦
I think I've kept them as door stops 😂
Door stops seems like a great choice for ramps that aren't trustworthy!
It's the flip side for me as far as trust. Mine are around that age, but they're built like tanks, with reinforcing cross-bars that tie the bottom of the ramp to the opposite end. Not sure of the rating without digging them out of the back of the shed. My car is too low to use them (without having to stack pieces of wood to lengthen the ramps), but I doubt that they'd bat an eye at that tractor!
@@EBuff75 mine are metal and were great for my mk3 fiesta, but for anything else they aren't
plus modern cars are now so much heavier i used a 2.5 ton jack as my 2 t one struggles
Smooth finished garage floors are bad for these, mine slip unless I have AWD or FWD.
Great point!
WOAH A MIN AGO??
Can you test different brand fuel pumps? having trouble with my 3000 gt
Thank you for the video idea!
That would be interesting to test. Wonder how someone could test durability.
Project farm! You read my mind brother. I was just looking at Ramps yesterday. 😅 I’m beyond excited! Thank you for you’re continued hard work.
Perfect timing! Thank you!
Am I the only one that when I see a new ProjectFarm video I think:
"Oh crap. What do I have to replace immediately now?"
Lol
Am I the only one that thinks that :
Some poor guy has to replace everything they own. Project farm proved it?
Happy Sunday y’all!
Happy Sunday!
Oi Oi Hello from the UK, love PF videos, they the best testing on YT.
Thank you!
Thank you 😉
You are welcome!
Oh thank you! I just bent steel ramps with my 3/4 ton.. been looking for new ones!
Our pleasure!
Anybody ever frightened when you drive up ramps and afraid your car is going to slip off?
i dont trust any of these i always put jackstands under the A pillar jack point and wheel chocks.
I just watched a build video for 2x8 wood ramps for $20. Thanks for your review!
Notification squad Have a Great weekend!🔥🔥🔥
Thank you and I hope you have a great weekend too!
Weekend is over 🙄
@@ProjectFarm Thank you!😁🙌🏼
Pure pro, as always. Nice work, well done, and all of that.
Thank you very much!
That wet T-shirt for grip is a great idea! Have had that trouble often and never thought of this!
Yes, I've never heard of that approach to getting more grip before, and I am curious whether it's a common trick or a new idea. But the rubber welcome mat idea seems to be more practical anyway.
The bonus for this trick is all the contests you get to attend to acquire the wet t-shirts!
Personally use Rhino Max Ramps. Love them a ton, but I don't have a smooth concrete floor like that. Easily holds up a Ram 2500 with a Cummins diesel. (Around 9000lbs)
Good day everyone!!!
Good day!
Ramps must be quite easy to DIY from wood and they will probably be much stronger than these.
Suggested video: Best universal LED LIGHT BAR for off-roading trucks, SUVs...
Thank you for the video idea!
Make your own with 2x10 lumber 8 ft long. Cut 25”, 23”, 21”, 19” and 8” vertical piece for the back stop… the stack will be 6” tall. Stack them, glue and nail them… can add carpet on bottom or soft rubber… they will hold more weight than any of these tested ones. And much cheaper too. Can make longer also with 10ft or 12ft long 2x10. Throw a rope handle on them and they will be easy to move around and store. They may weight 25Lb but use your muscles… mama didn’t raise no sissy… they will last forever, you can even coat them with something protective if you like.
Jack and jack stands any day over these death traps...they're impossible to safely drive up on, either sliding out or with the amount of throttle you need to get up them you end up going right over the front. Most normal passenger cars they also don't fit under.
I never have any trouble driving onto ramps. Honestly as long as the work I am doing does not require wheels off I trust good ramps over jackstands.
Depending on the position of the work being done, you find they get in the way of a creeper too.
@@adamn7516 I use my in floor scissor lift these days (vid on my channel if anyone is curious, the invisible car lift)...but back when I have used ramps, they always either slid, hit the bumper (so couldn't use them), or one time as a teen a friend drove right over the front of them...I should just sell my set of ramps at this point, save the space.
I had several scary ramp experiences with a set of Rhino Ramps. They would constantly slip, no matter the surface. I figured the safest place for them was the trash & that’s where they went.
Have you tested LED Car Mechanic Lights?
I suggest a new water bottle video using new brands like owala I only use 32 oz or higher capacity so I’d like to see how the bigger water bottles would perform
Best sunscreen please! Asian and European vs American. The FDA hasn't approved new sunscreen filters since 1996
Thank you for the video idea!
Sunscreens are toxic. Full of toxic chemicals that go straight through the skin. We are not meant to have sunscreen on us. We're meant to be in the sun
@@ProjectFarm may is skin cancer month
My late older brother got a 74 cougar xr7 when he was 16 ( I was 8) and used the old school metal ramps. I'd say they were much better quality than most of these, but it was super scary as a kid when your brother asked you to help him line them up and tell him when to stop. It was also in a stone driveway. It never went wrong (I like to think I was a pretty good spotter and helper for being 8), but all I would think of was if I messed this up, he was gonna run me over 😂😂😂
Can you test toothpaste? Thanks!
He can't test toothpaste. Cousin Eddy doesn't have any teeth.
Even they didn't show very well in this testing, I use RinoRamps for our vehicles, on pavement (rough) and have never had any issues with them even when my 16yr old daughter puts the car or trucks on them. She was pretty scared to do it the first time and hit the stops pretty hard but all was good. One of the tips I read is to put a piece of cardboard under the leading edge of the ramp so the tire is on the cardboard then rolls onto the ramp which is also on the cardboard. It worked really good when we were on a less grippy surface.
You should do best 5000 lumens flashlight.
Thank you for the video idea!
Used Rhino ramps for years without issue
Thank you for sharing!
First🎉🎉🎉 love your vids!!
Thank you and hope you enjoy the video!
Grade?
@@xploration1437 ???
@@Cooper_RSC are you in the first grade? Only dumb kids say “first”.
Race Ramps should have also been tested. They are the best i have used
Anyone knows if he ever did a brake pads test? Need to change the 2 back brake shoes for a pickup.
Akebono brake pads!!!
Also would like to see snowblower competition.
Man this videos often highlight how little choice consumers actually have. Most of these ramps look like they came out of the same factory in china with very minor cosmetic changes.
Thank you for sharing!
@@ProjectFarm Canned responses are the best!
I’m using a bent up set from the 70’s
Hello from South Africa.
Hi!
woahhh this is a solid video idea
i see so many ppl buy the cheapest one for Suvs lol
Thank you!
I suspect people who buy SUVs take their vehicle to a mechanic, which is a valid choice.
How about giving us a shop tour.
Heck yes, cant wait to watch !
I have plastic ones, they work great!! I’m always super cautious though because they probably could flatten at any point.
Thank you for sharing!
That title! 😂 💀
Thank you!
Not mine, mine is made out of layered, glued, and screwed 2x10s
Heavy but you could drive a semi on them
Those riffles in the steel ramp edges make my engineer senses tingle. Luckily, they're not in the center where the peak bending is, but it's an uncontrolled fold from the design. Who's to say 1/1000 wont fold in a way that compromises that shoulder area?
Thanks for the feedback.
Best reviews
Thank you!
When my dad taught me how to work on cars 25 years ago, he said you always use two types of support. So if you drive up a ramp, put a jack stand or two. That way if something slips / collapses / etc, you have enough time to get out.
Thanks for sharing.
iv been a Rhino Ramp owner for years. they've always worked great for me.
Thank you for sharing!
The Rhinos slipping was interesting, I have those but they never slip for my f150, must be the surface they’re on
Thank you for sharing!
Loved the video, I have never had a good time with ramps. For a future video, who do you think makes the best sockets?
Thank you for the video idea!
Was just looking to buy a car ramp, perfect timing😂
Thank you!
Can you do a video on the best carbide Sawzall blades
Thank you for the video idea!
👍👍👍👍👍, above and beyond, as always, great video.
Thanks!
Not sure if its out of season but id love to see what grass seed grows best
Thank you for the video idea!
Oh this gonna be a good one !
Thank you!
You must have cracked the algorithm! I've been shopping for ramps...
👍😎🍺🍩🛠️🗜️
YOU NEED TO DO SHAVING RAZORS
Thanks for the suggestion.
I just use concrete blocks nowadays stack them up and I can make the car 16inches high
Here's a possible test. Off brand antifreeze versus name brand antifreeze.
I made my own out of 2x8s. I wonder how they would hold up to these tests. I have a video on them, DIY Car Ramps, if anyone is curious. Although, I did not do any of the testing done here.
When I was about 16 or so my dad had a set of old metal ramps probably twice my age. I went to do an oil change on my 85 Ford Crown Vic wagon. I put it on the ramps and as I was bending down to get under the drivers side ramp collapsed. I’ve been super crazy about safety ever since