Wilson Audio speaker jacks


Opinions on Wilson Audio speaker jacks. Anyone use them?
husk01
I found the Wilson jack extremely useful for precise placement and toe-in of my Maxx2 speakers. You can roll the speakers on their casters to optimal positions but when you go to replace the casters with spikes without using the jack, you will need at least two people and the position and toe-in can change because you don't have complete control how the speaker is lowered. Since you'll be able to replace only two casters at a time, some wobbling and rotation will occur. Once the speakers are on their spikes it is very difficult to make position and toe-in corrections. (They are 410 lbs each.) However, with the jack, the replacement is a one person job: Determine the optimal position and toe-in with the casters on, slide the jack under, lift the speaker straight up, replace all 4 casters, lower the speaker straight down without any wobbling, and then slide the jack out.
I have never seen them.Post pics if possible.Guessing they are common and not custom as jacks are USUALLY designed for many loads/jobs.Is it the price or usefulness you are concerned about?
Wilson Audio makes the jack for the Maxx speaker which I have used (borrowed from the previous owner, he will not sell me the jack) with great success. It is a work of art, machined from billet aluminum and very slim to fit under the speakers. I think that you can buy one from Wilson for nearly $1000, which is consistent with his overall pricing policies! I'm sending pictures to a friend who has a home metal shop to see if he can reproduce a similar jack for me.
Try this Lo-Pro® Floor Jack Compact Low Profile Billet Aluminum Jack at California car cover. I bought it for my watt puppy 8. Bests, Luiz Falcao
How’s it work. You place the jack near each spike and change each corner one at a time?
No, you center the jack under the speaker’s center of gravity and raise the jack and the speaker lifts straight up.

Replace the casters with spikes, lower, remove jack.

The spikes are tall enough they keep the speaker off the floor enough so you can remove the jack, it’s only 1” tall.

The main difference between the Wilson jack and the auto jack is that the Wilson has a flat plate that lifts up and the auto jack has a slightly U-shaped saddle. I suspect you might want to place something on the saddle to make for a flat lifting surface like the Wilson has.

I’m sure you can come up with something for the $480 price difference between the two (the Wilson jack is $700.) 😁

falcio, did you find something for the saddle or is it not curved enough to dig in?

http://parts.wilsonaudio.com/wilson-audio-flat-jack/
https://www.calcarcover.com/product/low-profile-billet-aluminum-jack/705

https://youtu.be/_4gdT8gjNaQ


Kurcharsk
I use a hard flat rubber over the u-shaped to avoid any contact with the loudspeaker's base paint.
Pay attention to use the flat jack in the center of the smallest side of the loudspeaker (not too far from the edge). First, lift the front side. So, you can replace the two front casters with spikes. remove the jack and do the same at the rear side.

Do not lift the loudspeaker too much. If you have someone to help you, it will be better to avoid an accident.
Bests, Luiz Falcao