show off the new bar
IOPort51
NOT the voice of reason Jeep-CJ.com
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- 1977 cj-5
4.2 W/MC2100 carb, 4.0 head W/3 angle valves,SS Header,TFI ignition with MSB-6 offroad module,CS144 140 amp RPS alternator with remote regulator T-150,d-20,Dana 44 with OX lock and disk brakes. D-30 with Spartin locker,
skyjacker 2.5 lift?nitro shocks,31" BFG A/T off road.8000 lb Warn winch, original owner.=^)
2006 Toyota Tacoma
rr41mag, impressive, would for sure give a warm fuzzy as you made the second revolution.
CJ Sport Cage Dash Tie in Kit DIY CJ CJ5 CJ7 CJ8 | eBay
these are about the best $40 you can spend if you want to go this way. they do not come welded so you can modify as needed. Do be aware that there will be variations in the bolt pattern of the CJ dash. you may well have to spend some time on a mill or with a die grinder. but these mounts are very nicely plasma cut cold rolled steel, by a fellow Jeeper. I also had to make a bit more clearance for the glove box door. These can be welded to or drilled for the bolt on option.
I used 1 1/2" .090 wall tube. .120 is what most talk about but .090 is popular with the stock cap folks so they had it in stock. It cost me about $3 a foot. and I used about 20 feet.
I have to now tell you about my assembly method , strayed just a bit from the excepted path. I put this together as I would any other pipe welding job with the elbows and saddles being butt welded to straight sections of tube. This was before I found a local hot rod shop that bent tube and I did not wish to pay to ship that much tube UPS. I TIG welded everything and ground it pretty much smooth at the Butt joints. I found the best way to clamp butt joints was a section of 1x1x.5 angle and 2" muffler clamps. This started out as a way to make shipping parts easy but it made the assembly a lot easier than making continuous sections. If you are a decent welder your butt joint can be as strong if not stronger than the tube itself, you don't need worry that the saddle on one end is in perfect time with the other end and you get to tack everything in place rather than have to be able to make room to rotate the total section into place.
A digital level is almost a must. the front/top angle is the angle of the windshield plus the angle from horizontal to the point where the existing bar would be if it were a sharp corner rather than a radius bend.
The angle in the back should work with 22.5 deg but this will depend on the radius of the bend, it will be best to intersect the existing bar with a straight section of tube rather than in the bend.
Bolting to the existing bar was a whole other can of worms and if any body wants to go that way I will try to explain what I did and what I should have done.
When I fit mine I removed the canvas but left the hoops and door frames of the top in place to be sure I was going to clear. I am not that sure that I will be able to use this bar with my hard top but I will leave that problem for another day.
This was a pretty interesting project and there was more than a little setting in the drivers seat and looking for things that I may have interfered with like my head, the wiper motor, my knee, the gauges, glove box, tilt column, the list goes on. sourcing materials was an adventure and I met some very interesting people on that trail.
To do over I would, maybe, think about a frame tie in and I may need to add a cross bar to attach shoulder harness to one day, we shall see. I still have a 10' section of tube I need to use for something.

CJ Sport Cage Dash Tie in Kit DIY CJ CJ5 CJ7 CJ8 | eBay
these are about the best $40 you can spend if you want to go this way. they do not come welded so you can modify as needed. Do be aware that there will be variations in the bolt pattern of the CJ dash. you may well have to spend some time on a mill or with a die grinder. but these mounts are very nicely plasma cut cold rolled steel, by a fellow Jeeper. I also had to make a bit more clearance for the glove box door. These can be welded to or drilled for the bolt on option.
I used 1 1/2" .090 wall tube. .120 is what most talk about but .090 is popular with the stock cap folks so they had it in stock. It cost me about $3 a foot. and I used about 20 feet.
I have to now tell you about my assembly method , strayed just a bit from the excepted path. I put this together as I would any other pipe welding job with the elbows and saddles being butt welded to straight sections of tube. This was before I found a local hot rod shop that bent tube and I did not wish to pay to ship that much tube UPS. I TIG welded everything and ground it pretty much smooth at the Butt joints. I found the best way to clamp butt joints was a section of 1x1x.5 angle and 2" muffler clamps. This started out as a way to make shipping parts easy but it made the assembly a lot easier than making continuous sections. If you are a decent welder your butt joint can be as strong if not stronger than the tube itself, you don't need worry that the saddle on one end is in perfect time with the other end and you get to tack everything in place rather than have to be able to make room to rotate the total section into place.
A digital level is almost a must. the front/top angle is the angle of the windshield plus the angle from horizontal to the point where the existing bar would be if it were a sharp corner rather than a radius bend.
The angle in the back should work with 22.5 deg but this will depend on the radius of the bend, it will be best to intersect the existing bar with a straight section of tube rather than in the bend.
Bolting to the existing bar was a whole other can of worms and if any body wants to go that way I will try to explain what I did and what I should have done.

When I fit mine I removed the canvas but left the hoops and door frames of the top in place to be sure I was going to clear. I am not that sure that I will be able to use this bar with my hard top but I will leave that problem for another day.
This was a pretty interesting project and there was more than a little setting in the drivers seat and looking for things that I may have interfered with like my head, the wiper motor, my knee, the gauges, glove box, tilt column, the list goes on. sourcing materials was an adventure and I met some very interesting people on that trail.
To do over I would, maybe, think about a frame tie in and I may need to add a cross bar to attach shoulder harness to one day, we shall see. I still have a 10' section of tube I need to use for something.
