340six
King Of Bling
?
How big is your jack?just-t-t-t enough to get the jack under it.
(sometimes i'll need to give the bumper a little tug to get there)
IT'S AVERAGE SIZE!!How big is your jack?![]()
IT'S AVERAGE SIZE!!

OK someone one real answer. Thanksjust-t-t-t enough to get the jack under it.
(sometimes i'll need to give the bumper a little tug to get there)
The height above the ground for your k-frame directly is directly proportionate to the ride height of your car.OK someone one real answer. Thanks
that was a serious answer!OK someone one real answer. Thanks
Well, geez. Depends on wheel/ tire size, the "stance" AKA whether the rear is somewhat jacked, and where are the T bar height adjusters set. I bet you could get AS MUCH AS 8" difference in that figure.OK someone one real answer. Thanks
The height above the ground for your k-frame directly is directly proportionate to the ride height of your car.
The service manual gives you a spec to set your car to the proper ride height and measuring from the Center of the k-frame to the ground is not how you do it. To set ride height you measure the difference between the height to the Center of the LCA pivot and a spot in the LCA near the ball joint. The spec is in the manual and I don’t recall it right now.
Agreed on that exact measurement. Lift on the bumper when quickly rolling the floor jack in placejust-t-t-t enough to get the jack under it.
(sometimes i'll need to give the bumper a little tug to get there)
Sure. But isn’t the k-member to the ground measurement relative to the ride height? So in order to get the OP a number doesn’t the ride height have to be set, which then makes the information I gave him 100 percent relevant?That factory approved method is fine for stock vehicles that you want to keep stock.
These cars all were able to get more caster with the front lower than stock.
The OP asked for a number from the K member to the ground. He did not ask for a factory approved method that nobody I know actually uses except the purists.
Ok"Where I'm going with this one..."
Pretty simple, really. Awhile back, I asked a similar question on another forum. I too got responses from members telling me of the correct factory approved method of measuring ride height and then, just like now, I didn't care to read or hear of that.
The OP here didn't ask about any factory method, he asked a specific question about the distance between the K member and the ground.
It would be like asking a question about how much Ibuprofen to take for a headache and getting responses telling you to use Aspirin instead.
It is not a direct answer to the specific question that was asked.
What day is it? It is four o'clock.
What time is the bus expected to arrive? I suggest that you cut back on carbohydrates.
See my point?
If a man were to respond with more eloquence, he would not set himself up to be criticized....
The distance between the K member and ground? Well, in my 70 Valiant, it is about 6 inches but mine is set to the correct factory ride height. Just to let you know, there is a proper way to establish the ride height....it involves a few steps other than just the distance between the K member and ground.
A response like that wouldn't come across as scolding or condescending, just helpful.
Cheers....
On this thread that’s why my first post actually asked the one fella how big his jack was (I wasn’t trying to make a wise crack), what I should have asked was how high off the ground it was. Ie: I used a lot of 5 ton jacks doing tires for a living where the pad was around 6-7" off the ground, and other floor jacks as low as three inches.
That’s what she said…IT'S AVERAGE SIZE!!
Same here with my reply, but also now thinking if I get a new jack, I can lower the car more.while my initial response of "just enough to get the jack under it" was somewhat tongue in cheek, most of us have been around long enough to recognize that we're not using 5 tonners on these crap cans and most standard jack cups are about 4-ish inches tall
or like i said it's average
(or is it height/weight appropriate?)
(oh, and hi fellow fleet worker! *waves*)