I very much like my Rotary two post asymetrical lift. The price is just a little more than the others but if you go into a dealership or pro shop the lifts will likely be Rotarys. The only thing I don't like about the lift is that the posts are forever in the way of the front doors and body work. Just a pain but not insurmountable. Wish I had an inground lift for body work and a spare outside for pressure washing and sandblasting.... In my next life perhaps... KerryP Patch panels fabricated Pinkertonk@xxxxxxxxx dte.net/57imperial Imperials -- 50 Limo, 57 roadster, 61's, 62, 68 Convert, 73, a 66 300 and a bunch of lesser marques ----- Original Message ----- From: Thomas A <tommya99@xxxxxxxxxxx> To: <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Saturday, April 12, 2003 1:14 PM Subject: IML: Lifting your Imperial > > About 10 years or so ago I restored my 1942 Desoto Custom. Jacking it up > and down, crawling on my back, and jockeying jackstands was a torture. I > always said if I ever did that much work on a car again that I would invest > in a lift. The recent IML posts about the unfortunate accident someone had > sealed the decision. My new 1966 Crown Convertible will be the one. My > question is does anyone have any suggestion as to the brand. At this point > I'm torn between the American Equipment model TP-9 and the Autolifters model > Autopro 6000. What should I be looking for and what's your experience. The > Autolifters model rises an additional 6" than the TP-9. I'm not going with > the 4-post style because I don't want the frame blocked by the ramps and it > also makes brake and suspension work a little harder. Thanks for the input. > Tom > > _________________________________________________________________ > Add photos to your messages with MSN 8. Get 2 months FREE*. > http://join.msn.com/?page=features/featuredemail > > >