Thanks for being back and posting. With such a thin “wrench” you could easily remove some of the points on the nut and create a small circular section where the wrench could “spin” fixing the issue when it is all the way down with the wrench trapped in an orientation. Just a thought.
Thanks Tom. Clever design with all the features to certainly be proud of (proud enough to even paint 😂). Love to hear what’s going on in your shop, and I hope you found this short format easier to film and share. It definitely was detailed enough. 👍👍😎👍👍
Those stands are beautiful. If I had to make a graph to explain some of the things you make, it would intersect at artist and mad scientist. You have it all thought out when it comes to all things mechanical. I love your content.
I haven't been by for a while but it's good to see you still building cool projects. My favorite place is my shop as well. We are blessed to have a space to be creative.
I really like this style of jack stand. The last time I was at the family farm, I found several very old cast iron ACME screw jack stands. These are the Simplex type that have a collar with holes so you adjust them with a piece of rod. They are a bit tall, but useful none-the-less. I used them to level my trailer and they were perfect for that application. Your design is clean and super-cool as always.
Those are super nice jack stands. I wish I had a set for my C8 Corvettes. Only has approximately 4 inches of clearance, but something like this would lift it enough to then place a jack that can lift higher. 👍👍 Thanks Tom. We miss you.
super cool video! I have been looking for stands like yours! I just couldn't visualize them. Nice heavy duty, well thought out, and even cool looking and last forever. I'm glad you are back.
Good to see you back in the shop Tom. Those jacks are awesome which cancels having to bring out the hydraulic jack and the jack stands at the same time which is always a chore for me.
Very nice engineering and execution, l use my dad's old 1930's Model A jack as a stand. Like your swivel head, going to change my HF jack stands to include your swivel and threaded fine adjustment. Thanks for sharing 👍
Somehow I missed this video. Glad to see you're back. Nice build on the screw jackstands, might copy them when I get tired enough of my 'el cheapo's' . Thanks for sharing. Greetings from the Netherlands, Mark
REALLY missed your videos Mr Wizard. So happy to see your back to posting them again. Hope you and your family are doing well, and can't wait to see what you come out with next.
If you haven't heard, a lot of the harbor freight jack stands have been recalled. I leave the jack in place in addition to the jack stands, just as a backup.
Glad to see you back! It might be nice to turn a groove in the nut so a man could rotate the handle within the height of the nut. May come in handy when clearance is a problem.
Really nicely designed stands Tom. You only have to look at them to know they're strong. Like the Battle Ship Grey paint. Thanks for sharing. Cheers Nobby
Considering how flimsy some of these things are in the shops, i wouldn't dare buy one and have it fail on me. Rather make it myself - and given that you can buy the acme thread and nut and have bits cut for you and shipped, that's half the project done as far as i'm concerned. At that point, it's a pleasure to do the project. :))
I was watching the video thinking, would be great to reset the handle, and then boom!!, you did it. And you could use a long wrench to get more torque as well, nice!!!
Several years ago I made up a taller light duty version of this with the acme threads. I also had the same issue with the limited adjustability of the stands with pins. I also made the top replaceable so I could swap out between having a roller or a a fixed top.
Very nice design, I wish I would’ve seen a video of you making them. I am amazed at all. The people would say you should’ve bought them at Harbor Freight. I cannot afford cheap tools.
This exactly what I wish someone would make commercially. Ratchet stands work but being able to take up slack without having to over jack and then lower would be great. Need to send one over to project farm for some testing 👍
Hey Tom, great job but I miss the Monday meatloaf. I hear you are at Area 51 reverse engineering an alien spaceship. Is this why vlogs are so few lately? 😮😂
nice screw jack I have some cast iron railroad jacks that are similar those look able to withstand considerably more weight and are not brittle like cast iron..
There are several design features that are very neat. However, the most simple one of using the pin diagonally to keep the acme screw from turning, that one takes the cake. And if this is the dog meat you’re serving I’d like to eat at your house tonight.
Dogmeat engineering...... Did some of that today.... We have the keyways/collars on the drive end of a conveyor failing(likely due to faulty installation), and last Wed, the very hammered keyway I identifed 3months ago let loose. I was off Thursday, but they just realigned the keyways and shoved in keys, without any retaining mechanism. 9:30 this morning, both keys had been pushed out of the pulley. One sie remained jambed in the shaft side of the keyway, and the other key was found on the floor; as the asembly has absolutely no key retaining features beyond the 4 bolts that tighten the tappered collars mounting the pulley on the shaft, and due to rust, not one dares mess with the bolts tightening the tapered collars., so they shoved keys in the holes and aclled it good. It's a well out of alignment shaft, visible walking around, and I suspect the walking walked the keys out of the keyways. My solution was to hammer a key into the destroyed keyway with a 2-piece shaft collar to prevent outward movement) on the initial failure side(onl;y key on the pulley), and on the opposite end of the pulley with a more intact keyway I had the shop weld the key to the collar preventing both outward and inward movement. I"d initially refused to work on this due to past traumas of being tossed into the deep end of the pool(mainly not knowing what resources were available, as I was a relatively new laborer), and heard way too much BS after the fact after asking for help and not receiving several times. I'm paid to be an equipment operator, yet gets drug into repairs well beyond pay grade; and mechanics get super pissed when I say a word about how lazy they areO(walk through the shop and half the shop people are sitting around chatting at any time. .
Thanks for being back and posting. With such a thin “wrench” you could easily remove some of the points on the nut and create a small circular section where the wrench could “spin” fixing the issue when it is all the way down with the wrench trapped in an orientation. Just a thought.
I was thinking something similar. If you remove material from the nut and make it conical, it would help to reset the wrench...
Videos 2 weeks in a row, you're spoiling us Tom. I love the simplicity and versatility of these.
Thanks Tom. Clever design with all the features to certainly be proud of (proud enough to even paint 😂). Love to hear what’s going on in your shop, and I hope you found this short format easier to film and share. It definitely was detailed enough. 👍👍😎👍👍
This is great, as always, Tom, thanks so much! It's always a true pleasure to see something that's so thoughtfully designed in every detail.
Highly appreciate you sharing these designs. Love when people share designs to help the community, Especially something that is so useful.
Thanks for the video Tom. It's interesting to see how much force such a device can produce, and great to see you back posting again.
Those stands are beautiful. If I had to make a graph to explain some of the things you make, it would intersect at artist and mad scientist. You have it all thought out when it comes to all things mechanical. I love your content.
Those stands look lovely! Very well thought out and good looking, too. Thanks for sharing them with us.
I haven't been by for a while but it's good to see you still building cool projects. My favorite place is my shop as well. We are blessed to have a space to be creative.
Thanks Tom, that is a great design. It's good to see you sharing content again!
Just casually making the best functionally and aesthetically pleasing screw jacks ever.. that’s why Tom Lipton is the man
Man, what a beautiful design!
Good idea. Keep revealing these gems of utility.
I really enjoy your channel and the things you post. Thanks for sharing!
I really like this style of jack stand. The last time I was at the family farm, I found several very old cast iron ACME screw jack stands. These are the Simplex type that have a collar with holes so you adjust them with a piece of rod. They are a bit tall, but useful none-the-less. I used them to level my trailer and they were perfect for that application.
Your design is clean and super-cool as always.
Those are super nice jack stands. I wish I had a set for my C8 Corvettes. Only has approximately 4 inches of clearance, but something like this would lift it enough to then place a jack that can lift higher. 👍👍 Thanks Tom. We miss you.
super cool video! I have been looking for stands like yours! I just couldn't visualize them. Nice heavy duty, well thought out, and even cool looking and last forever. I'm glad you are back.
My bride of 60 years walked in here and seeing your video said WWTD. (What Would Tom Do?) When I am able to get into the shop I hear that quite often.
That's really neat, you showed me several thing I wouldn't have thought of, thanks for sharing
Creative design and good looking jack stand,Tom.Thank you.
Design=A++. and it looks strong enough to not "broke"!
Amazing how much lift you can get with the bearing addition!
Great build Tom. I always built my own stands back in the day.
Good to see you back in the shop Tom. Those jacks are awesome which cancels having to bring out the hydraulic jack and the jack stands at the same time which is always a chore for me.
I made a set for a friend using scaffolding screw legs. My friend loved them.
Great idea
I was thinking of you just this morning, and you showed up! Majik! West Chazy needs more Ox! Really enjoying your return to action 😊
Love the design!
Thanks for sharing 🇨🇦
Hi Tom ,
As always great work and explenation .
Good to see you again !😀
Glad your back. Keep up the interesting work.
Very nice engineering and execution, l use my dad's old 1930's Model A jack as a stand. Like your swivel head, going to change my HF jack stands to include your swivel and threaded fine adjustment. Thanks for sharing 👍
Very nice! You have a talent for improving anything you see. I look forward to the next “Tom designed tool”. Thank you.
Glad you’re back!
Somehow I missed this video. Glad to see you're back. Nice build on the screw jackstands, might copy them when I get tired enough of my 'el cheapo's' . Thanks for sharing. Greetings from the Netherlands, Mark
REALLY missed your videos Mr Wizard. So happy to see your back to posting them again. Hope you and your family are doing well, and can't wait to see what you come out with next.
I'm betting you could win the "Project Farm" jackstand test. I bet they'd come in handy for repairing your tanks. Nothing too strong ever broke.
Except on the sideways tip-over test.
Looks like some solid, hell for stout jack stands Tom. Well done!
Happy to see you back, sir. My last two Mondays have be much better. Cheers.
If you haven't heard, a lot of the harbor freight jack stands have been recalled. I leave the jack in place in addition to the jack stands, just as a backup.
Yeah, I was gonna say, they got recalled twice, didn't they?
Those are nice. I have 8 screw jack stands I bought at an auction sale. I used them for welding up my new car trailer to keep everything level.
Beautiful work as always, Tom.
Great to have you back 😊😊
Great shop project Tom!
Thanks for sharing. Nice project very useful information.
All I can say is I like it. Glad to see you on a video again. Thanks for the video keep on keeping on.
Glad to see you back! It might be nice to turn a groove in the nut so a man could rotate the handle within the height of the nut. May come in handy when clearance is a problem.
💡👍
Nice design Tom, well built too👍
Great design, I want to make a set now!
Really nicely designed stands Tom. You only have to look at them to know they're strong. Like the Battle Ship Grey paint. Thanks for sharing. Cheers Nobby
Considering how flimsy some of these things are in the shops, i wouldn't dare buy one and have it fail on me. Rather make it myself - and given that you can buy the acme thread and nut and have bits cut for you and shipped, that's half the project done as far as i'm concerned. At that point, it's a pleasure to do the project. :))
You can't buy that nice of a stand anywhere...beautiful job here..really sparked my imagination and may have to copy your style on this one
Thank you for another great video. Cheers
Woo hoo, any video from Ox tool!, thanks for sharing your knowledge with us.
Nice! These will go on the project list. All that AND a Gordon L quote at the end!
THESE SCREW JACKS LOOK AWESOME BRO..
Nice design!
Thanks for another great video!
Great Stands TOm, threaded jack stands are great for getting a vehicle level!
@oxtoolco great quote "for future functionality you didn't anticipate"
Thank you for sharing Tom.
This is awesome! Thanks for sharing!
I was watching the video thinking, would be great to reset the handle, and then boom!!, you did it. And you could use a long wrench to get more torque as well, nice!!!
Several years ago I made up a taller light duty version of this with the acme threads. I also had the same issue with the limited adjustability of the stands with pins. I also made the top replaceable so I could swap out between having a roller or a a fixed top.
A roller top would be really handy, on the right application. Lol
Very well thought out
Thanks
Nice build!
Very nice design, I wish I would’ve seen a video of you making them. I am amazed at all. The people would say you should’ve bought them at Harbor Freight. I cannot afford cheap tools.
Yes, that would have/will make a great video. It would be good to see a bit more of Tom also.
Very nice design, Thanks
Wow, I've been 3D-modelling basically the same thing in high school. It was like hundred years old but still very functional.
Nicely done.
Thanks Tom.
Kimber
nice tool, thanks for the lesson
That is impressive.
This exactly what I wish someone would make commercially. Ratchet stands work but being able to take up slack without having to over jack and then lower would be great. Need to send one over to project farm for some testing 👍
Thank you, Mr. Lipton !
Nice work Tom
great video - thank you!
Welcome back again!
Wow 2 videos in a week. Some nice little ideas there.
Nice book stand Thanks for the vid
I like 'em, thanks for showing
I AM IMPRESSED
Good to see content
Thanks for sharing g Tom.
Nuce seeying you posting New video's ☆☆☆☆☆
We missed you ❤
Grtz from the netherlands Johny geerts
This is perfect
Hey Tom, great job but I miss the Monday meatloaf. I hear you are at Area 51 reverse engineering an alien spaceship. Is this why vlogs are so few lately? 😮😂
Thank you Tom!
nice screw jack I have some cast iron railroad jacks that are similar those look able to withstand considerably more weight and are not brittle like cast iron..
There are several design features that are very neat. However, the most simple one of using the pin diagonally to keep the acme screw from turning, that one takes the cake. And if this is the dog meat you’re serving I’d like to eat at your house tonight.
0:58 HF….Not to worry Tom, you’re in good company. 👍👍
Hope your back OX, we've missed your videos
With that solid vertical to the ground those suckers are super strong.
Very cool
-Honey! Tom Lipton's back in RUclips !
-Tom who?
-The guy who hand made à bullet vise!
-A bullet what?
-Neh, nevermind....
Yeah! More videos please 🙂👍🇳🇱
Harbor Freight Tom? Well they can’t EVEN come remotely close to gloss gray like that Lol 😂 man I love your stuff you are a pro 👍👍
Perfect timing....
Nice stands Tom! how about turning the top of the nuts round so when the screw is all the way down you can still reposition the handle?
💡👍
Thanks again
very good job oxtoolco
You had me right up until the "friendly email" restriction.😁
Nice jack stands, Lift your house!!
👍 modern marvel worthy!
Dogmeat engineering...... Did some of that today.... We have the keyways/collars on the drive end of a conveyor failing(likely due to faulty installation), and last Wed, the very hammered keyway I identifed 3months ago let loose. I was off Thursday, but they just realigned the keyways and shoved in keys, without any retaining mechanism. 9:30 this morning, both keys had been pushed out of the pulley. One sie remained jambed in the shaft side of the keyway, and the other key was found on the floor; as the asembly has absolutely no key retaining features beyond the 4 bolts that tighten the tappered collars mounting the pulley on the shaft, and due to rust, not one dares mess with the bolts tightening the tapered collars., so they shoved keys in the holes and aclled it good. It's a well out of alignment shaft, visible walking around, and I suspect the walking walked the keys out of the keyways. My solution was to hammer a key into the destroyed keyway with a 2-piece shaft collar to prevent outward movement) on the initial failure side(onl;y key on the pulley), and on the opposite end of the pulley with a more intact keyway I had the shop weld the key to the collar preventing both outward and inward movement. I"d initially refused to work on this due to past traumas of being tossed into the deep end of the pool(mainly not knowing what resources were available, as I was a relatively new laborer), and heard way too much BS after the fact after asking for help and not receiving several times. I'm paid to be an equipment operator, yet gets drug into repairs well beyond pay grade; and mechanics get super pissed when I say a word about how lazy they areO(walk through the shop and half the shop people are sitting around chatting at any time. .