Nolander
Well-known member
Similar experience here. Had to be a little careful as, yeah, it’s not a floor jack, but it lifted just fine.The vehicle's included jack worked great for me on a rough dirt forest road.
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Similar experience here. Had to be a little careful as, yeah, it’s not a floor jack, but it lifted just fine.The vehicle's included jack worked great for me on a rough dirt forest road.
How is this okay for Ford to install a jack that doesn’t fit the truck? Just not right…..I ended up with a flat on my way home from work last week. I first attempted to use the included emergency jack, but I could not get it to lift the truck. It just kept moving on the ground rather than lifting.
Two different roadside assistance drivers only had floor jacks that could lift up to about 18" (which is standard), and they wanted to jack the control arms on the inside of the rear wheels. I refused and was adamant that they use the prescribed jack points on the side of the vehicle (the frame). The standard 18" lift height jack probably could have lifted it enough to get the flat tire off, but it would not have lifted it high enough to get the spare on.
I ended up having it towed home on a flatbed, and the next morning I bought a 3.5 ton jack that can lift up to 23" (~$300 at AutoZone). That was sufficient to get the spare on, and I'm getting a new set of tires today.
Due to this, for future road trips I am going to bring the 23" jack, tire inflator, and impact driver.
Just an FYI for anyone in a similar position. I may have missed it, but I didn't find anything in the manual about how much lift height is required, and most roadside assistance drivers will not have a jack that can lift that high.