Isn't there quite a lot of leverage in the vertical member which might twist the horizontal bar (or even break the welds)? Perhaps some bracing arms on the side opposite the car would fix that.
ditto. your intuition seems to reflect reality.. after finishing the crane and putting it to work.. at just over 200kg of load (i have heavy duty weight scale connected), the lower horizontal arm supporting the vertical arm started to buckle quite badly due to torsional force from vertical arm, so i abort the job, pull back the vertical arm back to its position "debuckle" the supporting arm and add diagonal supporting arms (attached picture) and now i'm confident and tested it can lift 200 or maybe a little bit more kg of load with no problem. i just dont have time to update in the drawing and repost the correction, thinking everybody that going to do this soon will realize the same (lazy me sorry for that)...
btw i have full confidence on my welding joint strength. i'm not a good welder but i can weld as many metal and layers as i want to since one box of rods only cost like $5 and i only use not even half or quarter of them in each of my small projects.
It looks like those bent loops are just welded around their end.
the loops were bought ready made from hardware store (i have few stocks so i dont have to buy), they are meant to hang ceiling fan. prewelded to a metal base with 2 holes on it, my part is to weld that base to the hoist, the loops buckled a little bit from my observation during the work, but doesnt really concerning me, i can redo and find much thicker loop, or made my self one, and again, my weld joint is not the weak one.
The rollers beneth the hoist also don't look very sturdy. Once the rollers collapes the dynamic force can bring down the rest even at a moderate load.
The lever ratio looks like 1 :2.5 or so.
In the current state I would not use it for more than some 100 kg.
you are right about the small rollers. the front plastic rollers crushed during the work, they are also from my stock, so obviously they are not for this kind of load. although not a sudden crush, i replaced the front rollers with more sturdy one. the rear side seems to hold pretty well, so no replacement needed yet. i tested 200kg+ of "near" static load but you are right i need to be carefull when moving load around. i'm more concern about the material strength, ie the hollow rectangular tube, they are just 2" x 4" 2.3mm thickness, they can buckle first long before my weld joints fail.
I'm all for DIY projects, but when Harbor Freight sells a 1 ton engine hoist for just over $200 building one seems kind of like building a screwdriver. Sure you can do it, but unless the material is free you're not saving anything.
you are right, but thats not considering the shipping cost. i designed and measured the dimension so i can use only one bar of rect hollow tube (6m length) and it costs $40, thats why i didnt implement double vertical arm and have to do fancy "double bone" lifting arm, because otherwise it will exceed 6m length and i have to buy 2qty of rect tubes and keep most of the extra unused length in my limited store, not to mention double the cost. the most expensive part though is the 2T lifting hoist (chain block unit) $80+ but i'm thinking that i can use for something else, hang it on a house roof and lift something much bigger, for example. with ready made hoist, i cant repurpose the hydraulic jack welded into it.
ps: dont mind the painting job. they are hand painted obviously and i'm not sure why the paint quality / brand is so fucked up shrink badly like that, or maybe i was too lazy not to put undercoat before painting. previously i painted with other brand directly to the metal without such problem.