Cold winter floors. The lingering unease of jack stands. At a certain point in the car hobby, most DIY-ers come to want or need a lift. If you are in a forever home, have the means and the space, know your slab is for sure thick enough, and are ok with shop upgrades (25A circuit with a high-mag breaker, usually and sometimes shop air), a two- or four-post lift is a few thousand dollars of heaven.
There are solutions for most situations, each with its own compromises. For us, a Kwiklift was the best solution for the next few years. Here's how it went:
We caught a promotion and got free shipping, a $129 value for our location. We opted for the standard lift, which comes powdercoated and includes one centerlift bridge. The lift is typically shipped to a nearby freight terminal. Sounds inconvenient but it is configured to fit between the wheel wells of a standard pickup truck bed. The good folks that the terminal will load it into your vehicle. Once home, cut open the boxes and remove the pieces one at a time, no special equipment needed.
We checked the dimensions and found our lift would fit perfectly into a full size cargo van. Hello, U-Haul.
Start by laying out the ramps upside down, approximately where you want the lift to end up. Two modestly strong people can manage pretty easily.
Bolt the two sections of track together on each side, then flip them over.
Place the ramps on the stands, insert the hinge bars and safety pins. Grease the lift bar holes and slide the lift bar into position.
With the supplied lever, rotate the lift bar to the up position, then raise the back of the ramps with a floor jack.
Pull the spring-loaded safety locks out to drop the back legs, which lock into position.
The ramps didn't slide around when we drove a car on, but we are experimenting with rubber mats anyway.
Adjust the ramps to your vehicle's width and the lift is ready to use.
We plan to add a stripe of anti-skid tape up the center of the ramps. Tire height in the up position is 20" above the floor. You can use the center bridge, bottle jacks or scissors jacks for wheels-off service and you can park on or over the ramps for long-term storage. Time to assemble? About an hour. We had our tools put away, the garage door down and the rental van swept and returned in 2 hours.
For reals, if a "big" lift works for you, they're great. We still want one in the future. If that isn't in the cards though, Kwiklift gets you 70 or 80% there super easily.