Psycho Bunny
MSLR Blk/White/19's RN: 4443 VIN:4551 EDD: Nov 24
I ordered a Dodge Ram Promaster Scissor Jack from ebay. I will let you all know if it fits when i get it next week.
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If you want a good scissor jack, Modern Spare sells their jacks seperate, for about $35 bucks. They are 4000 lb jacks and already have a rubber puck attached to them. This is the same jack that they include in their spare tire kit for Teslas.
4000 LB - TruLift Ratcheting Scissor Jack w/ Rubber Contact Point
Product Details : 4,000 Pound Rated Weight Capacity Ratcheting Lift System Requires 56% less effort than conventional jack. Rubber Contact Point* Lifting Range From 4 Inches to 17-1/2 Inches Air & Electric Tool Compatible For Rapid Use Free Shipping Anywhere in the Continental USmodernspare.com
As promised, here are pics of the comparison of the scissor jack and the tesla pucks. I still have yet taken delivery of my MSLR.I ordered a Dodge Ram Promaster Scissor Jack from ebay. I will let you all know if it fits when i get it next week.
That looks pretty good. What are the dimensions, and min height?As promised, here are pics of the comparison of the scissor jack and the tesla pucks. I still have yet taken delivery of my MSLR
@orntar are you asking what the full height is of the scissor jack when fully extened and the minimum height when closed?That looks pretty good. What are the dimensions, and min height?
One function of the “puck” is to give you some wiggle room for placing the jack. It doesn’t need to be perfect. You can feel for the hole. It also helps you sight the jack once the puck is in you can see where to put the jack.As promised, here are pics of the comparison of the scissor jack and the tesla pucks. I still have yet taken delivery of my MSLR.
One function of the “puck” is to give you some wiggle room for placing the jack. It doesn’t need to be perfect. You can feel for the hole. It also helps you sight the jack once the puck is in you can see where to put the jack.
Good luck “aiming” that jack at the hole on the side of the road at night. You have to get on the ground, crank it part way up to line it up perfectly. Your aiming for something you can’t even see easily on your knees. But not to hard to find by feeling it.
Maybe you can add arrows to the side of the car of where the holes are so you have a chance at aiming the jack but that won’t help with how far in you need to put the jack. You’ll need to look up under the car as you jack it up.
Pucks help sight the jack left, right, in, out and give an inch or so of slop in all directions.
Also note how low the car will be, with a flat.
Bad idea. Hope you don’t miss.
hope these work for you.The length, width, and height when all the way down. Just looked kinda large from what I could see online, no visual reference.
Nice set up. Where did you get that ratchet adapter? What's it called?My Jack "kit" is all decked out now Also have a 20" x 1/2" ratchet extension not shown.
I cut the foam out to fit the lug wrench (that extends), the 6pt 21mm socket, and a ratchet (which is used to drive the jack).
I took the nub off and added some rubber to the jack
I also added an adapter to the jack to allow 1/2" ratchet drive.
Amazon. I listed all links in one of my posts.Nice set up. Where did you get that ratchet adapter? What's it called?
Yes, I believe it did. Fairly tidy setup. I have it now in my X and always used the foam.Does anyone know if the Porsche Jack in the op fits in the little compartment under the trunk with the full foam kit?
What you really want is swivel castersHi msw et al., long time reader, first time poster. I bought a set of used 2018 winter wheels for my 2021 M3 (don't get me started on the TPMS incompatibility; the service dept said it would be fine (lie)) and am looking to do seasonal tire swaps and front/back rotations at home rather than my local shop for convenience. I picked up a Porsche 000.721.711.05 jack off eBay and after watching a service guy pop up one side with a floor jack, I figure I'll just stick with a pad (Abstract Ocean) and forego fiddling with the suspension arm/covered rear/etc. Now my question is what's this about going parallel with the body rather than perpendicular? I studied physics rather than mechanical engineering but I'm curious. Is this consistent with the angle of the original oblong nub and the instructions on the side of the jack? They're not quite explicit. Looking at a few photos of scissor jacks, they all seem to be used in the perpendicular configuration, so I'm curious what's up.
On the rest of the kit, I'm an avid avoider of Amazon (at nearly all costs) and went with a GearWrench 85180 torque wrench, 84579N 21mm socket (both from Acme Tools), 84719N 9" U-joint extension, and am going to file the nub off with Nicholson 06706N file (both from ToolsID) and then get a long M6 bolt from BoltDepot to screw the AbstractOcean jack adapter puck to the top of the jack.
Hello this Jack seems very nice for Model 3 !hope these work for you.
What did you pay? $100?A big thank you to this thread. I got a Porsche jack on eBay, ground it down, and it fits the Y hole perfectly.