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Just had a brain wave.
I saw in PPC mag about a year ago a bloke who had a really tall single garage and 2 cars. He made an arch out of the same stuff that industrial pallet racking is made of and put wheels on it. He was able to lift and support 1 car by jacking the front up a notch then doing the rear, then front again etc etc untill it was high enough to stand underneath and work on and/or get the other car underneath. He could wheel the whole thing in and out of his garage.
Can't find any pictures of it sadly, maybe one of the other PPC readers can.
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I know this might be something thats been covered already..
But what about a set of vehicle ramps anchor bolted into the floor? just drive in, up and you should have enough room to access the pit underneath and it would remove the need for any jacking? If wheels need removing you could jack from the sill, support under hubs then place axle stand under the sill? make the ramps easily removable so you have plenty of work space / access.
Team Cyril
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I'll clarify tiger..
Filling the pit to capacity at 4degC will yield the largest increase in volume when frozen hence the highest lift
Given the choice between Niall and the sheep. I would choose the sheep!
/Toseland
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It won't, as the water freezes at zero not 4°C
It will overflow at 3°C then 2°C then 1°C losing that additional water.
Your method only works when say filling a 100ml container with 50ml of water allowing for expansion/contraction of the fluid.
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ahh i didnt think of that, lol,
i forgot to mention that there was a forcefield generator holding the water in place.
Given the choice between Niall and the sheep. I would choose the sheep!
/Toseland
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I'll repeat my earlier comment, get rid of the pit.
If it is not big enough and some DIY effort, then it's not big enough and some DIY effort - safety concerns there.
Flat smooth concrete for jacking and lifting gets my vote!