Oh yeah, flat landing for sure! That's a far cry from my neck of the woods. Calgary is borderline acceptable as far as terrain goes...at least it's only an hour's drive to the Rockies from there. But an hour seems pretty far when I've got an 8500 foot peak looming right over my town!
I spent about a day working on the passenger side rock slider doorsill. It's basically done except for the final finish which I will do at the same time as the other side, which is completely undone at this point. It's a fair bit of work but it is turning out nicely.
Clearance check at full compression. Had to do some more hammering and trimming at the front.Still not sure if it's going to be completely rub free, but I think I've fixed the metal rib inside the fender which was slicing the outboard tread off my tires!
Sizing things up:
Before putting a cap on the back:
After. I smeared seam sealer all over this later too.
Before capping the front, which was more work because the top of the tube is also open:
So I had to cap the end and the top, using a rectangle and a triangle and a whole shwack of seam sealer.
I'm happy with how it turned out, but might add some details by the bottom of the fender flares because it looks like something's missing there. Or maybe I'll add another tube that sits out a few inches to provide protection from sliding sideways into stuff, and allows the slider to be used as access for the roof rack. Each one only weighs 38 pounds after I got 40% of the tube removed by plasma cutter to fit around the side impact protection in the body...prior to that they came in at 58 so it is considerable savings, so I could afford to add a bit again, but I am trying to avoid adding unnecessary weight so we'll see.