I have the classic Halfords ramps and she has been on them before with no issues (the tyres hang over the sides and I make sure there are a couple of bricks inside the angle iron in case the rust has weakened them)freddofrog said:You can't drive these cars up ramps anyway, the front bumper is too low.
Put the jack on some blocks of wood, if you're using a scissor jack and it's too difficult to tuun on high blocks of wood, start with the jack on a low block, insert the ramps a bit, lower the car, insert more wood, raise the car, push the ramps in further, etc, etc .
Neither did I when the seal was leaking (sourced a new seal several days later), so I used the scissor-jack that came with the car, you can use blocks of wood to lift it at the front a bit at a time, slide the car ramps in, release jack, more wood, raise car again, slide ramps in further, etc, etc.Channel Hopper said:The one thing I don't have is a working trolley jack.
Two blocks of 9"x2" under the front edge of my ramps solves this problem nicely.freddofrog said:I've also got some ancient (30 years old) Halfords ramps and the Accord won't drive up them because the distance from front bumper to the wheel is too long, and the bumper is too low, so the bumper catches the ramps and pushes them away.
Car ramps are also really old hat, you're much better off with a trolley jack and axle stands.
Either way, as described, using scissor jack or short trolley jack, you can lift a car up at the front (and back) by using blocks of wood. Car ramps do help in that situation to ***ist with jacking a few inches at a time. With that method you can get the car up so that the axle stands extend quite a bit. I've done it once when the seal was leaking on the trolley jack.
He hasn't got the engine running and says he wants to take a look from underneath , reckons he can drive a diesel with injectors still in, up a car ramp, using the starter motorGoodluckmonkey said:Far easier than all the effort of jacking the thing up too.
It did \/Jon_G said:But it starts, why not drive it up? The leak is described as being 'aft of the bulkhead and flows forward', so running the engine isn't going to result in a fountain of diesel (lovely as that might be).
Channel Hopper said:She's going
Channel Hopper said:And, back to square 1.
Tried starting today and OK for first ten seconds, then died.
Looked under car after cranking to find a pool of diesel dripping from the subframe on the left, directly under the fuel filter. Trouble is, the pipes and filter are as dry as a bone, right down to the device just underneth it where the flexible pipes go.
Channel Hopper said:It's going to be a pain if I cant start her to put on the ramps. It looks like the leak is aft of the bulkhead and flows forward. The is nothing to identify the source from the top. The fuellines running near the exhaust look OK all the way forward.
Channel Hopper said:I'd forgotten about using the starter motor to get up the ramp, time to charge battery again.
So you reckon it's quicker and simpler to drag out a load of wood and two ramps, line them up, get in the car, drive it up ....than it is to wheel out the trolley jack, jack the car up, and stick an axle stand in each side ?Goodluckmonkey said:It's a lot quicker (For me anyway) to drive it up a pair of ramps.
If the wheels ate coming off, then yes, the trolley jack comes out.
The point wasn't whats best, it's that you said it doesn't go up an old set of Halfords ramps, and I said that with a block under the nose of the ramp, it does.
https://imgur.com/gallery/2u1G5
And my car's so low, the front lip won't go over a kerb.
Trolley jack has wheels and the handle slots in, so you push it along while carrying the stands, so it's only 1 journey.Goodluckmonkey said:Yeah,
2 blocks of wood, 2 ramps, or
2 axles stands, trolley jack, jack handle.
Still 4 items and 2 trips up and down the drive to me.
I don't care how you raise your car, I use both methods. I like to not have the axle stands in my way under there unless strictly necessary, and find driving up a pair of ramps far easier.
You just said that his car wouldn't go up a set of ramps, but it could, that's all.
People told me my car wouldn't take an N22A2 motor; it did, it's even got a turbo I put together from both accord and civic parts.
I swapped out all the injector nozzles myself with the injector held between 2 flanged nuts in a vice, just like you shouldn't be able to, and Fahad will conform how well they worked when my car was plugged in.
According to what a lot of people have said on here, half the parts my car has should be no good, and the way I decide to do things is completely different to the mighty manual.
Same old, same old. Too many people love the words can't and doesn't a bit too much.
Last word on raising the tourer, it has gone up on the Halfords/Seeley type ramps a number of times with no trouble and no additional ***istance with blocks or extenders. I am however waiting for the road to dry before doing so. I have no reason to doubt that in first gear the starter motor could be used.freddofrog said:Trolley jack has wheels and the handle slots in, so you push it along while carrying the stands, so it's only 1 journey.
Plus there's no lining up to do, plus no getting into the driver's seat and starting the engine.
Plus the stands aren't in the way, they're at the sides, not on the subframe.
and I was right these cars don't go up on car ramps, unless you resort to adding things to the ramps
And I fail to see what the engine in your car has to do with any of this thread, shall I talk about all the engines I've taken out of cars and replaced ....petrol mind you, but big and heavy cast iron LOL
and when the engine isn't running, the ramp is no good either, which is where it started when I offered advice about jacking the car up ......Threads within threads. gotta love 'em.
As of Sunday, she no longer starts and as you can see from the images, this is a large amount of diesel. I spent much of yesterday travelling to borrow a friends car while I am working on the fuel leak.Jon_G said:But it starts, why not drive it up? The leak is described as being 'aft of the bulkhead and flows forward', so running the engine isn't going to result in a fountain of diesel (lovely as that might be).
What I could se on Sunday before the rain started was a completely dry area around the top of the engine near the filter and ***ociated pipes, though I had commenced on taking the hand pump support plate apart to check the filter and bleed valve once again. Feeling around behind and under the canister confirms it is dry though.Goodluckmonkey said:C/H, have you checked the joints and the bleed nut at the fuel filter for leaks, and also the priming bulb for any splits.
These would allow the fuel to leak back and introduce air into the line before the fuel pump.
As you've found, once there's air in the line (your original problem.was caused by not using the bleed at the filter - which isn't noted in the forum how-to either) that it takes an eternity to crank the air through and out of the system.
I'd check the simple (and cheap) bits first, before stripping everything apart.
If it comes to it, I have a spare (known good) fuel pump on the bench.
If it's injector leak, that's a specialist refurb job.
It was an example. Everyone loves to say "you can't..... or such-and-such doesn't go in such-and-such"freddofrog said:And I fail to see what the engine in your car has to do with any of this thread.......
Well when I were a lad, axle stands and a trolley jack very expensive, these days they're not, so in the 21st century I can't see any reason for not using them. If I also took my tools to help someone, the axle stands and trolley jack would also go in the car, turning up with car ramps would look juvenile. I guess it's a matter of me no longer being a lad and being wiser. I can't be bothered to replace wisdom with out-dated thinking.Goodluckmonkey said:It was an example. Everyone loves to say "you can't..... or such-and-such doesn't go in such-and-such"
And they all do this without doing any research.
Everything fits, there's no such word as can't, and it's only people's own lack of self belief that stops them getting things done.
Ramps are something small and seemingly insignificant, but its another case of can't, as opposed to you can if you do this...
Channel Hopper said:Last word on raising the tourer, it has gone up on the Halfords/Seeley type ramps a number of times with no trouble and no additional ***istance with blocks or extenders. I am however waiting for the road to dry before doing so. I have no reason to doubt that in first gear the starter motor could be used.