The situation is... I'm aging, and just finished another 4 corner brake job in a crouched position with jack stands. It's tough on my lanky 6'+ frame to spend all that time as a contortionist. Time for a lift!
My garage port is tiny - 100" max ceiling height. The cars I plan to continue working on are my '96 Miata track car, and the Mrs' 2010 Yaris.
currently looking at this:
https://www.naautoequipment.com/Universalift-2-7-000-lb-capacity-2-Post-Portab-p/c7000.htm
Any suggestions?
I have a lift similar to this in a garage with 10 foot ceilings and even those a a little low for really getting under the car at standing height. In a roller chair its about perfect.
Unless you really need the two post capabilities I would say go quick jack or something similar which gets the car off the ground and you can work in a chair or standing depending on your preference.
I have a Bendpak mid rise lift (https://www.bendpak.com/car-lifts/mid-rise-scissor-lifts/mds-6lp/) that get the car about 45" off the floor. Its great for most work, and the lifting platforms also make a handy available working table. My garage has a 100" ceiling and my Corvette doesn't hit the roof. I've had a Durango on it but we could only lift that to the lowest level (approx 20". Brake jobs are a pleasure - just sit on the rolling tool box.
I have a MaxJack portable and it's about perfect. You can stand to do brakes. I sit on a creeper for underside work. When I'm done I unbolt it, roll it in the shop, and stick it out of the way in a corner.
759NRNG
PowerDork
7/17/23 6:39 p.m.
Would y'all do a trans swap with this ?
In reply to 759NRNG :
I would. But I also just did a trans swap on jackstands. Lots of benchpressing required
759NRNG
PowerDork
7/17/23 7:06 p.m.
birdmayne said:
In reply to 759NRNG :
I would. But I also just did a trans swap on jackstands. Lots of benchpressing required
And if I had to venture a guess you're far younger than me (1953) . Looking for minimal physical exertion for these procedures....standing straight up or almost..
Just bought a used set of quick jacks and they work well so far but man - seeing the MaxJax I think I would have gone that route!

Working under the C10 on MaxJax is easy. We have a creeper seat that I can roll around on underneath with ease and comfort. The only downside is loss of lower body leverage when applicable.
I absolutely love the system and intend to put one in my own shop at some point
759NRNG said:
Would y'all do a trans swap with this ?
The problem with transmission swaps on lower-rise lifts is that as far as I can tell nobody makes a low-rise transmission jack. All the ones I've seen have a minimum height which is too tall for this.