blowup jack??
#51
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: blowup jack??
Fire and rescue crews frequently use airbags to lift vehicles or toppled
machinery or collapsed building parts and so on. I've even seen them
used to pull vehicles parts out of the way for extrication (lift sling
run from the steering wheel, over the hood and down to a hook on the
frame. The bag goes on the hood, under the sling). The difference is
that those are filled from a high-pressure air bottle.
L.W.(ßill) ------ III wrote:
> Hi Jennifer,
> I'm sure I've seen it used to save a person trapped under a
> vehicle, but I can't find an example. Must have been replaced by the
> "jaws of life" tool. Anyway I know just how hot the exhaust gets, and
> that makes this a toy and a waste of money. The only write up I could
> find about the bag, was a four wheel drive group from down under. An
> excerpt: http://www.----------.com/temp/airBalloonJack.pdf
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:--------------------
>
> jbjeep wrote:
>
>>Ok, so lets try this again. (maybe Mike wont be pissy about it this way)
>>
>>HEY, WOW!
>>Anyone ever seen or heard of anything like this???
>>Its made by ARB.
>>
>>"With a lifting capacity of 4000kg, an exhaust jack is ideal for use in sand, mud and
>>snow. The jack is inflated via a hose that connects to your tailpipe – when the
>>engine is started, the jack inflates.
>>
>>Anyone think it would actually be usefull and or work in anything besides maybe
>>sand??
>>-jenn
machinery or collapsed building parts and so on. I've even seen them
used to pull vehicles parts out of the way for extrication (lift sling
run from the steering wheel, over the hood and down to a hook on the
frame. The bag goes on the hood, under the sling). The difference is
that those are filled from a high-pressure air bottle.
L.W.(ßill) ------ III wrote:
> Hi Jennifer,
> I'm sure I've seen it used to save a person trapped under a
> vehicle, but I can't find an example. Must have been replaced by the
> "jaws of life" tool. Anyway I know just how hot the exhaust gets, and
> that makes this a toy and a waste of money. The only write up I could
> find about the bag, was a four wheel drive group from down under. An
> excerpt: http://www.----------.com/temp/airBalloonJack.pdf
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:--------------------
>
> jbjeep wrote:
>
>>Ok, so lets try this again. (maybe Mike wont be pissy about it this way)
>>
>>HEY, WOW!
>>Anyone ever seen or heard of anything like this???
>>Its made by ARB.
>>
>>"With a lifting capacity of 4000kg, an exhaust jack is ideal for use in sand, mud and
>>snow. The jack is inflated via a hose that connects to your tailpipe – when the
>>engine is started, the jack inflates.
>>
>>Anyone think it would actually be usefull and or work in anything besides maybe
>>sand??
>>-jenn
#52
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: blowup jack??
Fire and rescue crews frequently use airbags to lift vehicles or toppled
machinery or collapsed building parts and so on. I've even seen them
used to pull vehicles parts out of the way for extrication (lift sling
run from the steering wheel, over the hood and down to a hook on the
frame. The bag goes on the hood, under the sling). The difference is
that those are filled from a high-pressure air bottle.
L.W.(ßill) ------ III wrote:
> Hi Jennifer,
> I'm sure I've seen it used to save a person trapped under a
> vehicle, but I can't find an example. Must have been replaced by the
> "jaws of life" tool. Anyway I know just how hot the exhaust gets, and
> that makes this a toy and a waste of money. The only write up I could
> find about the bag, was a four wheel drive group from down under. An
> excerpt: http://www.----------.com/temp/airBalloonJack.pdf
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:--------------------
>
> jbjeep wrote:
>
>>Ok, so lets try this again. (maybe Mike wont be pissy about it this way)
>>
>>HEY, WOW!
>>Anyone ever seen or heard of anything like this???
>>Its made by ARB.
>>
>>"With a lifting capacity of 4000kg, an exhaust jack is ideal for use in sand, mud and
>>snow. The jack is inflated via a hose that connects to your tailpipe – when the
>>engine is started, the jack inflates.
>>
>>Anyone think it would actually be usefull and or work in anything besides maybe
>>sand??
>>-jenn
machinery or collapsed building parts and so on. I've even seen them
used to pull vehicles parts out of the way for extrication (lift sling
run from the steering wheel, over the hood and down to a hook on the
frame. The bag goes on the hood, under the sling). The difference is
that those are filled from a high-pressure air bottle.
L.W.(ßill) ------ III wrote:
> Hi Jennifer,
> I'm sure I've seen it used to save a person trapped under a
> vehicle, but I can't find an example. Must have been replaced by the
> "jaws of life" tool. Anyway I know just how hot the exhaust gets, and
> that makes this a toy and a waste of money. The only write up I could
> find about the bag, was a four wheel drive group from down under. An
> excerpt: http://www.----------.com/temp/airBalloonJack.pdf
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:--------------------
>
> jbjeep wrote:
>
>>Ok, so lets try this again. (maybe Mike wont be pissy about it this way)
>>
>>HEY, WOW!
>>Anyone ever seen or heard of anything like this???
>>Its made by ARB.
>>
>>"With a lifting capacity of 4000kg, an exhaust jack is ideal for use in sand, mud and
>>snow. The jack is inflated via a hose that connects to your tailpipe – when the
>>engine is started, the jack inflates.
>>
>>Anyone think it would actually be usefull and or work in anything besides maybe
>>sand??
>>-jenn
#53
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: blowup jack??
Jenn, now you see that no good deed goes unpunished <g>.
On Fri, 30 Dec 2005 23:44:44 UTC jbjeep <jbjeep@saw.net> wrote:
> Ok, so lets try this again. (maybe Mike wont be pissy about it this way)
>
> HEY, WOW!
> Anyone ever seen or heard of anything like this???
> Its made by ARB.
>
> "With a lifting capacity of 4000kg, an exhaust jack is ideal for use in sand, mud and
> snow. The jack is inflated via a hose that connects to your tailpipe when the
> engine is started, the jack inflates.
>
> Anyone think it would actually be usefull and or work in anything besides maybe
> sand??
> -jenn
--
Will Honea
On Fri, 30 Dec 2005 23:44:44 UTC jbjeep <jbjeep@saw.net> wrote:
> Ok, so lets try this again. (maybe Mike wont be pissy about it this way)
>
> HEY, WOW!
> Anyone ever seen or heard of anything like this???
> Its made by ARB.
>
> "With a lifting capacity of 4000kg, an exhaust jack is ideal for use in sand, mud and
> snow. The jack is inflated via a hose that connects to your tailpipe when the
> engine is started, the jack inflates.
>
> Anyone think it would actually be usefull and or work in anything besides maybe
> sand??
> -jenn
--
Will Honea
#54
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: blowup jack??
Jenn, now you see that no good deed goes unpunished <g>.
On Fri, 30 Dec 2005 23:44:44 UTC jbjeep <jbjeep@saw.net> wrote:
> Ok, so lets try this again. (maybe Mike wont be pissy about it this way)
>
> HEY, WOW!
> Anyone ever seen or heard of anything like this???
> Its made by ARB.
>
> "With a lifting capacity of 4000kg, an exhaust jack is ideal for use in sand, mud and
> snow. The jack is inflated via a hose that connects to your tailpipe when the
> engine is started, the jack inflates.
>
> Anyone think it would actually be usefull and or work in anything besides maybe
> sand??
> -jenn
--
Will Honea
On Fri, 30 Dec 2005 23:44:44 UTC jbjeep <jbjeep@saw.net> wrote:
> Ok, so lets try this again. (maybe Mike wont be pissy about it this way)
>
> HEY, WOW!
> Anyone ever seen or heard of anything like this???
> Its made by ARB.
>
> "With a lifting capacity of 4000kg, an exhaust jack is ideal for use in sand, mud and
> snow. The jack is inflated via a hose that connects to your tailpipe when the
> engine is started, the jack inflates.
>
> Anyone think it would actually be usefull and or work in anything besides maybe
> sand??
> -jenn
--
Will Honea
#55
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: blowup jack??
Jenn, now you see that no good deed goes unpunished <g>.
On Fri, 30 Dec 2005 23:44:44 UTC jbjeep <jbjeep@saw.net> wrote:
> Ok, so lets try this again. (maybe Mike wont be pissy about it this way)
>
> HEY, WOW!
> Anyone ever seen or heard of anything like this???
> Its made by ARB.
>
> "With a lifting capacity of 4000kg, an exhaust jack is ideal for use in sand, mud and
> snow. The jack is inflated via a hose that connects to your tailpipe when the
> engine is started, the jack inflates.
>
> Anyone think it would actually be usefull and or work in anything besides maybe
> sand??
> -jenn
--
Will Honea
On Fri, 30 Dec 2005 23:44:44 UTC jbjeep <jbjeep@saw.net> wrote:
> Ok, so lets try this again. (maybe Mike wont be pissy about it this way)
>
> HEY, WOW!
> Anyone ever seen or heard of anything like this???
> Its made by ARB.
>
> "With a lifting capacity of 4000kg, an exhaust jack is ideal for use in sand, mud and
> snow. The jack is inflated via a hose that connects to your tailpipe when the
> engine is started, the jack inflates.
>
> Anyone think it would actually be usefull and or work in anything besides maybe
> sand??
> -jenn
--
Will Honea
#56
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: blowup jack??
Yes, just can't find that commercial quality on the internet.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Lee Ayrton wrote:
>
> Fire and rescue crews frequently use airbags to lift vehicles or toppled
> machinery or collapsed building parts and so on. I've even seen them
> used to pull vehicles parts out of the way for extrication (lift sling
> run from the steering wheel, over the hood and down to a hook on the
> frame. The bag goes on the hood, under the sling). The difference is
> that those are filled from a high-pressure air bottle.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Lee Ayrton wrote:
>
> Fire and rescue crews frequently use airbags to lift vehicles or toppled
> machinery or collapsed building parts and so on. I've even seen them
> used to pull vehicles parts out of the way for extrication (lift sling
> run from the steering wheel, over the hood and down to a hook on the
> frame. The bag goes on the hood, under the sling). The difference is
> that those are filled from a high-pressure air bottle.
#57
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: blowup jack??
Yes, just can't find that commercial quality on the internet.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Lee Ayrton wrote:
>
> Fire and rescue crews frequently use airbags to lift vehicles or toppled
> machinery or collapsed building parts and so on. I've even seen them
> used to pull vehicles parts out of the way for extrication (lift sling
> run from the steering wheel, over the hood and down to a hook on the
> frame. The bag goes on the hood, under the sling). The difference is
> that those are filled from a high-pressure air bottle.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Lee Ayrton wrote:
>
> Fire and rescue crews frequently use airbags to lift vehicles or toppled
> machinery or collapsed building parts and so on. I've even seen them
> used to pull vehicles parts out of the way for extrication (lift sling
> run from the steering wheel, over the hood and down to a hook on the
> frame. The bag goes on the hood, under the sling). The difference is
> that those are filled from a high-pressure air bottle.
#58
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: blowup jack??
Yes, just can't find that commercial quality on the internet.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Lee Ayrton wrote:
>
> Fire and rescue crews frequently use airbags to lift vehicles or toppled
> machinery or collapsed building parts and so on. I've even seen them
> used to pull vehicles parts out of the way for extrication (lift sling
> run from the steering wheel, over the hood and down to a hook on the
> frame. The bag goes on the hood, under the sling). The difference is
> that those are filled from a high-pressure air bottle.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Lee Ayrton wrote:
>
> Fire and rescue crews frequently use airbags to lift vehicles or toppled
> machinery or collapsed building parts and so on. I've even seen them
> used to pull vehicles parts out of the way for extrication (lift sling
> run from the steering wheel, over the hood and down to a hook on the
> frame. The bag goes on the hood, under the sling). The difference is
> that those are filled from a high-pressure air bottle.
#59
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: blowup jack??
Filled by a high pressure air bottle THROUGH A REGULATOR.
All our air tools ran off "Air bottles".
"Lee Ayrton" <layrton@panix.com> wrote in message
news:dp71rb$g5o$1@reader2.panix.com...
> Fire and rescue crews frequently use airbags to lift vehicles or toppled
> machinery or collapsed building parts and so on. I've even seen them used
> to pull vehicles parts out of the way for extrication (lift sling run from
> the steering wheel, over the hood and down to a hook on the frame. The
> bag goes on the hood, under the sling). The difference is that those are
> filled from a high-pressure air bottle.
>
> L.W.(ßill) ------ III wrote:
>> Hi Jennifer,
>> I'm sure I've seen it used to save a person trapped under a
>> vehicle, but I can't find an example. Must have been replaced by the
>> "jaws of life" tool. Anyway I know just how hot the exhaust gets, and
>> that makes this a toy and a waste of money. The only write up I could
>> find about the bag, was a four wheel drive group from down under. An
>> excerpt: http://www.----------.com/temp/airBalloonJack.pdf God Bless
>> America, Bill O|||||||O
>> mailto:-------------------- jbjeep wrote:
>>
>>>Ok, so lets try this again. (maybe Mike wont be pissy about it this way)
>>>
>>>HEY, WOW!
>>>Anyone ever seen or heard of anything like this???
>>>Its made by ARB.
>>>
>>>"With a lifting capacity of 4000kg, an exhaust jack is ideal for use in
>>>sand, mud and
>>>snow. The jack is inflated via a hose that connects to your tailpipe –
>>>when the
>>>engine is started, the jack inflates.
>>>
>>>Anyone think it would actually be usefull and or work in anything besides
>>>maybe
>>>sand??
>>>-jenn
All our air tools ran off "Air bottles".
"Lee Ayrton" <layrton@panix.com> wrote in message
news:dp71rb$g5o$1@reader2.panix.com...
> Fire and rescue crews frequently use airbags to lift vehicles or toppled
> machinery or collapsed building parts and so on. I've even seen them used
> to pull vehicles parts out of the way for extrication (lift sling run from
> the steering wheel, over the hood and down to a hook on the frame. The
> bag goes on the hood, under the sling). The difference is that those are
> filled from a high-pressure air bottle.
>
> L.W.(ßill) ------ III wrote:
>> Hi Jennifer,
>> I'm sure I've seen it used to save a person trapped under a
>> vehicle, but I can't find an example. Must have been replaced by the
>> "jaws of life" tool. Anyway I know just how hot the exhaust gets, and
>> that makes this a toy and a waste of money. The only write up I could
>> find about the bag, was a four wheel drive group from down under. An
>> excerpt: http://www.----------.com/temp/airBalloonJack.pdf God Bless
>> America, Bill O|||||||O
>> mailto:-------------------- jbjeep wrote:
>>
>>>Ok, so lets try this again. (maybe Mike wont be pissy about it this way)
>>>
>>>HEY, WOW!
>>>Anyone ever seen or heard of anything like this???
>>>Its made by ARB.
>>>
>>>"With a lifting capacity of 4000kg, an exhaust jack is ideal for use in
>>>sand, mud and
>>>snow. The jack is inflated via a hose that connects to your tailpipe –
>>>when the
>>>engine is started, the jack inflates.
>>>
>>>Anyone think it would actually be usefull and or work in anything besides
>>>maybe
>>>sand??
>>>-jenn
#60
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: blowup jack??
Filled by a high pressure air bottle THROUGH A REGULATOR.
All our air tools ran off "Air bottles".
"Lee Ayrton" <layrton@panix.com> wrote in message
news:dp71rb$g5o$1@reader2.panix.com...
> Fire and rescue crews frequently use airbags to lift vehicles or toppled
> machinery or collapsed building parts and so on. I've even seen them used
> to pull vehicles parts out of the way for extrication (lift sling run from
> the steering wheel, over the hood and down to a hook on the frame. The
> bag goes on the hood, under the sling). The difference is that those are
> filled from a high-pressure air bottle.
>
> L.W.(ßill) ------ III wrote:
>> Hi Jennifer,
>> I'm sure I've seen it used to save a person trapped under a
>> vehicle, but I can't find an example. Must have been replaced by the
>> "jaws of life" tool. Anyway I know just how hot the exhaust gets, and
>> that makes this a toy and a waste of money. The only write up I could
>> find about the bag, was a four wheel drive group from down under. An
>> excerpt: http://www.----------.com/temp/airBalloonJack.pdf God Bless
>> America, Bill O|||||||O
>> mailto:-------------------- jbjeep wrote:
>>
>>>Ok, so lets try this again. (maybe Mike wont be pissy about it this way)
>>>
>>>HEY, WOW!
>>>Anyone ever seen or heard of anything like this???
>>>Its made by ARB.
>>>
>>>"With a lifting capacity of 4000kg, an exhaust jack is ideal for use in
>>>sand, mud and
>>>snow. The jack is inflated via a hose that connects to your tailpipe –
>>>when the
>>>engine is started, the jack inflates.
>>>
>>>Anyone think it would actually be usefull and or work in anything besides
>>>maybe
>>>sand??
>>>-jenn
All our air tools ran off "Air bottles".
"Lee Ayrton" <layrton@panix.com> wrote in message
news:dp71rb$g5o$1@reader2.panix.com...
> Fire and rescue crews frequently use airbags to lift vehicles or toppled
> machinery or collapsed building parts and so on. I've even seen them used
> to pull vehicles parts out of the way for extrication (lift sling run from
> the steering wheel, over the hood and down to a hook on the frame. The
> bag goes on the hood, under the sling). The difference is that those are
> filled from a high-pressure air bottle.
>
> L.W.(ßill) ------ III wrote:
>> Hi Jennifer,
>> I'm sure I've seen it used to save a person trapped under a
>> vehicle, but I can't find an example. Must have been replaced by the
>> "jaws of life" tool. Anyway I know just how hot the exhaust gets, and
>> that makes this a toy and a waste of money. The only write up I could
>> find about the bag, was a four wheel drive group from down under. An
>> excerpt: http://www.----------.com/temp/airBalloonJack.pdf God Bless
>> America, Bill O|||||||O
>> mailto:-------------------- jbjeep wrote:
>>
>>>Ok, so lets try this again. (maybe Mike wont be pissy about it this way)
>>>
>>>HEY, WOW!
>>>Anyone ever seen or heard of anything like this???
>>>Its made by ARB.
>>>
>>>"With a lifting capacity of 4000kg, an exhaust jack is ideal for use in
>>>sand, mud and
>>>snow. The jack is inflated via a hose that connects to your tailpipe –
>>>when the
>>>engine is started, the jack inflates.
>>>
>>>Anyone think it would actually be usefull and or work in anything besides
>>>maybe
>>>sand??
>>>-jenn