Motorbike lifts/ramps chioice and advice needed

Discussion in 'Clothing, Gadgets & Equipment' started by wantz1, Jan 1, 2013.

  1. Whatever you buy make sure it is wide enough for a rear stand, some like the one I have arent and you have to fudge it to getit working ok. Also longer the better: mine has a removable tail piece so you can work withthe rear wheel out but it useless!!
     
  2. we have one at work looks identical to the sealey one though i know it came from machine mart
    definetly check length as rear detachable ramp not load bearing and if no centre stand back wheel could hang off the back
    only just long enough for peugot speedfight
    also front wheel clamp not great as does not stop from tipping very well
    realy need clamp that goes up at front of wheel aswell had to modify one at work not hard if handy with a welder and drill lol :upyeah:
     
  3. As Johnboy and 2242 say. I have one from Bike It which other than being chequer plate looks identicle, the front chock/clamp works well in keeping the bike upright.
     
  4. Never used the front clamp thingy....But can see how the more robust one on the others would be useful..:upyeah:
     
  5. i got a free standing wheel block thing in the garage, would i be able to use it on one of these ramps?
     
  6. ah the clarke one is better than one we have at work
    ours is identical to the sealey
    modded clamp similar to the clarke one
    just found it unstable for my liking
    plus teenagers wont leave anything alone lol
     
  7. +1 for the machine mart lift - had mine for about 5 years and its been brilliant - plenty big enough for the 998 or my 1098 with length to spare. No issues with it all - and at 300 quid it was a bargain.
     
  8. so it looks like the clarke cml3 gets the vote for being best

    cheers :upyeah:
     
  9. I have used a clarke lift for over a year now and found it to be very useful, just a couple of things though. As someone has already mentioned, the lift has a lip on each side running lengthways. This creates problems with a single-sider stand as they are often too wide to sit inside. I also use an abba stand with my SC and this is also too wide for the deck. The simplest solution is to get a large sheet of ply which is just thick enough to raise the deck above the lip and cut to size. Also, when loading I would put a decent piece of timber underneath the front of the lift as it can dip a bit which is disconcerting.
     
  10. great thread - hurry up and press 'buy' I need to get my zausts off end of next week :eek:
     
  11. I've got a Clarke with pneumatic lifting as well as pedal which saves a lot of faffing about pumping the thing up; Clarke CML3 Air & Foot Pedal Operated Hydraulic Lift - Machine Mart
    Had it for several years now and has been spot on, very strong/stable which is good as it almost always has a bike on it. It's big enough to fit any bike and I've even had ride-on mowers and quads on it.

    If you register with Machine Mart then wait until they have a VAT free week you'll save some serious money... :upyeah:
     
  12. I'm going the other way. Getting rid of my loft, it doesnt lift anymore anyway! And going to have a go at building a fixed height table but 3ft wide and 8ft long, use as storage bench and bike bench
     
  13. I knew there was something else I had a problem with. The front wheel clamp gizmo prevents the use of a front wheel paddock stand which is often required if tinkering with your front end. I unbolted the clamp and removed it completely.
     
  14. As my chock was rubbish, I drilled some holes and fitted ome pf those standalone ones, so yes you can
     

  15. have had one of those for about 5 years now, excellent and no regrets buying it
     
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