(quoted from post at 04:03:31 02/04/11) I don't have anything useful to offer up on this topic, I always use chain hoists to remove/install engines because it's much easier to do fine positioning with the heavy object supported from a chain hoist rather than trying to move an entire engine hoist into position. Not only that, but there's the engine hoist boom to bang your head on, the engine hoist legs in the way when you're trying to roll underneath on a creeper, etc.
I would like to weigh in on the "cherry picker" term though. While it's understandable that aerial work platforms and manlifts may sometimes be referred to as cherry pickers, (but even then I'd have to ask why....unless that's what they're actually being used for), how did this term ever get adopted for the engine hoist device? They have never. and will never be employed in any cherry picking endeavors.
*Engine hoist* even has fewer syllables, so it's shorter than *cherry picker*.
It's far more appropriate, it's easier to say, and it doesn't leave anything up for misinterpretation. I say we put this "cherry picker" nonsense to bed. Either that, or we develop colorful and equally illogical terms for other stuff. I'm thinking my transmission jack could be something like *pistachio dolly*.
"Hey buddy, are you gonna be around this weekend? I was wondering if I could borrow your cherry picker and pistachio dolly? I've got an engine and transmission to install, and it's a real bear without a decent cherry picker and pistachio dolly....."
:wink:
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(quoted from post at 12:07:21 02/03/11) I bought a 2 ton engine hoist[cherry picker] from Northern,hooked it to a 4 cyl.perkins diesel,can hardly move it after I pick it up. Very dissapointed.
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