Anything in reasonable condition, central processor not B&Q etc
[Edited on 26/2/15 by theprisioner]
I've made a scale from a 2 ton bottle jack - drilled at the bottom into the pressure area and tapped to screw in a 0 - 1000psi gauge. In my case
read off the pressure multiply by 0.7 and it gives you the weight its carrying in pounds. Cost was £8.50 for the bottle jack and around £3 for the
gauge off ebay. You can make 4 for very little if you really need them. Google will show videos on how its done with better instructions than mine.
Diameter of the piston in the jack is critical in calculating the exact load. Obviously mine is limited to 700lbs but a 0 1500 psi gauge would
increase that figure if you need it.
Credit where its due - not my original idea but prompted by someone on the Haynes Forum -Stot
quote:
Originally posted by ianhurley20
I've made a scale from a 2 ton bottle jack - drilled at the bottom into the pressure area and tapped to screw in a 0 - 1000psi gauge. In my case read off the pressure multiply by 0.7 and it gives you the weight its carrying in pounds. Cost was £8.50 for the bottle jack and around £3 for the gauge off ebay. You can make 4 for very little if you really need them. Google will show videos on how its done with better instructions than mine. Diameter of the piston in the jack is critical in calculating the exact load. Obviously mine is limited to 700lbs but a 0 1500 psi gauge would increase that figure if you need it.
Credit where its due - not my original idea but prompted by someone on the Haynes Forum -Stot
I am sure you are right about accuracy V8kid, it will depend on the quality of gauge used. With mine its the cheapest 63mm dial gauge on ebay. However
as the gauges are analogue they would be easy to compare deflection and get pressures on each wheel matched.
Mine is simply to have a means of saying what my roadster weighs with low cost.
This was one of the videos that I found to explain the procedure
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZBmxkWK_OFA
Ian