Citidiot question.

Shop is full, I'd rather work on it on concrete than gravel. I guess that I could do it in the street, I just don't like the idea of being in the road while working on it.
Fair enough. I just want to minimize any chance beyond my own stupidity. Now if it's your only option, I guess I would crib it out. More work then necessary for sure.
 
Shop is full, I'd rather work on it on concrete than gravel. I guess that I could do it in the street, I just don't like the idea of being in the road while working on it.
Try not to extend the jack stands more than necessary, use wide base cribbing.

You really should be fine though.
 
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I'd chock the hell out of the rear on the slope, then use the stands on top where it's relatively flat.

Unless you've got the special inclined-use stands.
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Rear Wheels chocked and facing uphill . I’d take jackstands on sloped cement over level asphalt most days too.
This.
ALSO Reminded me of when I was replacing the rear axle on a Suburban and ran out to check it when I heard a loud boom in the middle of the night. Turns out a propane tank blew up and set a house on fire around the corner. Suburban was still up on jackstands.:homer::laughing:
 
That asphalt looks pretty flat. Do one side at a time with the side you're working on facing your house so at least the truck will crush you when someone hits it instead of getting run over
that's only if the jackstand doesn't go leaning tower of pisa after the feet sink into the asphalt at an uneven rate and get you crushed before someone collides with the vehicle .
 
You’re in California, why don’t you have a $1000 Craigslist lift bolted to the slab already?

Eta, I like to let the vehicle weight rest on the chocks Before jacking it up, rather than relying on my foot tap to get them set in.
 
I've done worse. I've pulled engines on slopes that I had to toss a chain under the engine hoist wheels to keep it from rolling, then use a 2x4 to inch it back uphill by levering it against the back of the hoist. Good times.

I've had a honda accord chained up to a cherry picker to get the engine out of my 3.0 toyota before. Not a good time at all honestly, but better than chained to the floor jack to pull the zf6 and t case in the ford.
 
I've had a honda accord chained up to a cherry picker to get the engine out of my 3.0 toyota before. Not a good time at all honestly, but better than chained to the floor jack to pull the zf6 and t case in the ford.
If you had other options.... would you have used them.... I think he maybe has options.
 
As a proper hillbilly I would jack it up facing down hill with the rear tires well blocked. Then after its up high enough I would put green tree rounds under the frame rails right about B pillar/front doors. Then jackstands as backups to hopefully buy me a second to get out from under it should it go south. At least thats how I support mine when I work on it. Oh yea level ground more better.

Unless you have good jack stands there is no way I would trust them to hold that pig alone.
 
As a proper hillbilly I would jack it up facing down hill with the rear tires well blocked. Then after its up high enough I would put green tree rounds under the frame rails right about B pillar/front doors. Then jackstands as backups to hopefully buy me a second to get out from under it should it go south. At least thats how I support mine when I work on it. Oh yea level ground more better.

Unless you have good jack stands there is no way I would trust them to hold that pig alone.

Plywood footings under the stand fixes that.
Ah no. That's gravity pulling the weight down hill. Stand on a hill with a plumb bob, see if it points at your toes.
 
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