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Zap-A-Jack

TAKE A SECOND LOOK—ITʼS NOT AS DUMB AS IT MAY SEEM

Combining a standard screw-turned scissor jack with a 12-volt motor rated to lift up to 2250 pounds is a great idea. Most street rodders don’t carry a spare tire, let alone a jack or a lug wrench, generally because of the lack of a place to store it in the car. Even if you can’t carry a spare, it’s a good idea to have a jack, especially with your car as low as it is. As handy as this unit is, you’d be wise to tie one to the framerail if there’s no other place to hide it. Think of the hero you’d be if you could help out a fellow rodder in a pinch.

We know youʼve already checked out the photos or you wouldnʼt be reading this. You obviously wish to know a little more about this jack, so weʼll cut to the bottom line: If you get one of these for your very own, youʼd better not tell any of your buddies about it, or you will have to make room in the safe to store it. If they spot it in your trunk, just laugh about how you got it as a gift and hope none of them reads this article, or you will have to tape a cell phone to it to find out where it is this weekend–just when you need it!

We first saw this gizmo a couple of years back and took it to be a fugitive from one of those gadget catalogs. We figured that the guy who had them in his booth had picked up a couple of cases on the cheap and was trying to make a buck. Recently, when we saw the booth again, he was giving somebody a demo, so we took a few minutes to see what it was all about. Well, it was actually kinda cool—up it went and down it went with only the push of a button, while connected to a 12-volt battery.

The salesman said it was great for changing a flat on a lowered car, because you didnʼt have to work a lever or crank in limited space. That made perfectly good sense to us, having been in that predicament ourselves a time or two. It fits easily in your trunk and will plug into the lighter, or clip directly to the battery. We thought it was very handy.
We walked on nonetheless. Suddenly the wheels began turning, and they did so for the next hour or more. We had to go back and ask some questions: “Will it work at any angle? Will it do this? Will it do that?”

Well, yeah, it really does do this, and it really does do that, and youʼre going to love this thing! Weʼve shown you just a few reasons why, and weʼre sure youʼll have no trouble coming up with more on your own. Once you realize that it will pull just as well as it will lift or push, youʼll be up all night thinking of even more uses for it. Could you chain it to a rafter and pull your engine? Weʼre not certain, but possibly. Could you lift the sagging corner of your garage? Pull off a brake drum? Push the clutch in and out from under the car? If you can jig it up, this thing can do it.

Though we havenʼt had the need to try it yet, we suppose it would come in pretty handy for changing a tire as well.

How can such a small motor running on only 12 volts lift so much weight? It runs through a reduction gear case, fully engineered with bronze bushings and factory packed with enough lube to last many, many years.
Oh, yeah: It also will jack up a vehicle to change a tire. Note the 12-foot-long wire going to the truck’s battery. The jack is rated at 2,250 pounds, but it has been known to lift one end of a diesel pusher motorhome (however, we cannot recommend that). Check out the shadows under those tires–it’ll pick up your street rod!

 

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Paulʼs All Pro Glass

562/630-5006

9031 E. Somerset Blvd. Bellflower, CA 90706

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