Rotary SPOA7-MP — a 7,000 lb two-post pad lift on an asymmetric turned column. Instead of swing arms, it lifts on screw-up pads with rubber blocks, sitting low (2-5/8” pad height) for low-clearance vehicles. ALI/ETL certified, 208-230V single phase, no air required. Freight included.
Choose standard or the Shockwave high-speed package, and color. Ships with four each 1-1/2” and 3” rubber blocks. Full specs are in the sheet below and the Rotary install manual is attached as a PDF.
Note: the Shockwave (high-speed) option is battery-powered and requires two 24-series batteries, sold separately.
Questions? Call 800-674-9302. Specs per the Rotary install manual (IOM Rev BE).
Rotary SPOA7-MP 7,000 lb 2-Post Pad Lift
Quote, Spec Sheet, and Preparation Checklist
Print this for your install crew or your budget meeting.
Install Manual (PDF)Your Configuration
| Lift model | Rotary SPOA7-MP — 7,000 lb 2-Post Pad Lift |
| Configuration | Asymmetric turned column, pad lift (rubber-block pads), standard height (141″), finished in Red |
| Voltage | 208-230V single phase |
| Capacity | 7,000 lb |
| Overall height | 141″ |
| ALI Certified | Yes |
| Lift price | $10,811.00 |
| Estimated total | $10,811.00 |
| Freight | Included (prepaid by AMI) |
| Quote valid | 30 days |
Bay Requirements
| Ceiling height needed | 12’ |
| Bay width (minimum) | 12’ |
| Bay depth (recommended) | 24’ |
| Column spacing (inside) | 8’ 3-3/8” |
| Overall height | 141” standard · 149” Shockwave |
Concrete spec (from Rotary IOM)
- 4-1/4” minimum thickness, 3,000+ PSI compressive strength
- Steel-reinforced, cured at least 28 days
- Level within 3/8” over the install area
- No anchor placement within 3-3/8” of any crack, edge, or expansion joint
- Anchors: Hilti KwikBolt III (3/4” × 5-1/2”), 10 per column, torqued to 110 ft-lbs
- If slab does not meet requirements: pour 4’ × 4’ × 6” concrete pad per column
Air supply: Not required (manual lock release)
Electrical: 208-230V single-phase, dedicated 20A breaker (see Electrical block below)
We’ll ship you our concrete test tool so you can verify your slab before you commit. $250 deposit is fully refundable when you return the tool within 30 days. You cover return shipping.
Arm Options — Comparison
The SPOA7-MP is a pad lift — it lifts on screw-up pads with rubber blocks instead of swing arms, so it sits low and clears tight vehicles.
| Lift type | 2-post pad lift, asymmetric turned column, 7,000 lb capacity |
| Pad height (low) | 2-5/8” minimum pad height |
| Included blocks | Four each 1-1/2” and 3” rubber blocks for stacking to the lift point |
| Shockwave high-speed option | 71” rise class, faster up/down, laser spotting. Battery-powered — requires two 24-series batteries (sold separately). |
Install Coordination & Rough Ballpark
Typical installer cost for this lift: $1,100 – $1,600
What that ballpark covers: standard install on a clean slab with electrical already run to the bay.
What it does NOT cover:
- Removing your existing lift
- Moving equipment that’s currently attached to the lift you’re replacing
- Electrical work (separate licensed electrician — see Electrical block)
- Concrete repairs or new pad pour
- Location-driven variation (rural deliveries, urban access, multi-floor, etc.)
Two paths:
(a) Find your own installer. We can refer one in your area — call us if you need a recommendation. You’ll handle scheduling and payment direct with the installer.
(b) Let us coordinate the install.
We schedule the installer, handle warranty registration after install, and do a post-install inspection. The $499 deposit is applied to your final install bill. If we can’t find an installer in your area, the deposit is fully refunded.
What to Watch Out For
Above the lift — check at the FRONT and REAR of where the vehicle will land, not just over the columns.
The vehicle’s hood and trunk extend past the lift columns when raised. Anything mounted to the ceiling in those zones can hit the vehicle before the lift reaches full rise.
Look for:
- Garage door opener motor + the door panels themselves when the door is fully open
- Exhaust ventilation hoods or snorkels
- Shop lights and fixtures
- Compressed air piping
- Existing hose reels (especially if you’re replacing an old lift)
- HVAC ducts, heaters, radiant heaters
- Roof rafters, beams, mezzanine edges
Below the lift — check the slab where the columns will anchor:
- Visible cracks within 3-3/8” of where anchors will go (deal-breaker per Rotary IOM)
- Existing anchor bolt holes from an old lift (require relocation or epoxy filling)
- Old inground-lift concrete patches — the patch may not be rebarred to the surrounding slab; treat the patch as unreliable
- In-floor radiant heat — hydronic tubing under the slab can be punctured by anchor drilling. Get utility locates before drilling.
- Floor drains and how the floor slopes toward them — affects lift positioning
- Buried electrical conduit — get utility locates
- Old concrete (20+ years) can have hidden fractures — visible-OK doesn’t mean structural-OK. The concrete test tool catches this.
Rules of thumb:
- Never reuse existing anchors from a prior lift install.
- If installing near old anchor holes, pour anchor bolt epoxy into the new hole before driving in the wedge anchor. The epoxy bonds the anchor into compromised concrete that wedge action alone can’t grip.
Electrical Recommendations
This lift runs on 208-230V single-phase, 20-amp dedicated circuit (2 HP motor). Per the Rotary IOM: never operate on line voltage below 208V.
Hire a licensed electrician for hookup. Most installers are not certified electricians, so plan on the electrical as a separate trade.
One breaker per lift. Running two lifts off one breaker will trip the breaker as soon as both run at the same time, and it makes future service harder. Budget for a dedicated circuit per bay.
Don’t hard-line conduit directly to the lift body. Electricians sometimes run mounting bolts into the lift housing to anchor conduit, which damages internals or makes the lift jump during operation.
Strongly recommended: loose “whip cord” with twist-lock plug, hanging from the ceiling.
Why:
- Gives you slack if the lift install location ends up a foot off from planned (it happens — concrete inspections, anchor positions, existing equipment can all push the final location around)
- Eliminates the need for a separate shop disconnect switch on the wall — techs just unplug the pump when servicing
- Easier to swap out the power unit later without bringing the electrician back