Feature

●Use for a wide variety of leveling and adjustment applications
●Ideal for industrial or agricultural equipment trailers
●Bracket attaches in a variety of ways in order to meet needs
●Provides stability and leveling to unattached trailers


Description

The Vestil TJ-F3 top tube ring trailer jack has a crank handle on the top, a tubular mount, and a base pad, and it can be welded to a trailer to raise or lower it for hitching, leveling, or loading. The tube ring mount can be welded to the trailer, and it rotates, allowing the jack to be turned to a vertical position for use or to a horizontal position when not in use. A pin and chain assembly at the mount holds the trailer jack in a fixed position. The crank handle can be used to raise or lower the trailer. The trailer jack has a load capacity of 2,000 lb., weighs 20 lb., and measures 41-7/16" high extended and 26-7/16" high retracted. The center of the tube ring mount is 27-3/8" high when the jack is extended and 12-3/8" high when it is retracted. The base pad measures 7-1/2 x 4 inches (W x D). (W is width, the horizontal distance from left to right; D is depth, the horizontal distance from front to back.) This product is intended for use in professional and industrial environments.

Jacks are machines used to lift heavy objects, such as vehicles, trailers, structures, or heavy machinery. Jacks come in a range of styles for different applications. Common varieties include bottle jacks, which resemble a large bottle in shape and use hydraulic force to lift the load; floor jacks, which typically contain a long pump handle and caster wheels and sit low to the floor; and tongue jacks, which can be mounted onto the frame of a trailer to lift and lower it. Jacks can be used on construction sites or in warehouses, automobile repair shops, or industrial facilities.

Vestil manufactures materials handling equipment, including hoists and trolleys, jib and gantry cranes, loading dock equipment, and storage solutions. The company, founded in 1968, is headquartered in Angola, IN.