Ah! I forgot one other piece of (mild) carnage that happened at Uwharrie this year!
I finally caught one of my roof bars on a tree going up the backside of Daniel...

It bent my rain gutter a fair bit, but was thankfully still fixable.
As such: it's time for a narrower roof rack!
This style looks good, is probably very strong due to all the bends and boxing, and is probably pretty light being made out of aluminum. (all of which makes it rather expensive...)
This style is more "standard" but is probably still fairly heavy being made out of steel and having so many cross bars.
I really like the "full gutter" style roof racks that I've seen for a variety of vehicles. I also like the extruded aluminum cross bars for weight savings.
Looking closer at this one, it's odd that they chose a full length style whose main benefit is that it will distribute the weight of whatever is on the rack more evenly, and then negated that benefit by creating an attachment system that screws into the roof in four separate places so it can't distribute the weight along the whole rack...
I've seen some with feet like these for more traditional gutters, but they're not as easy to find, and many just aren't the right size for the 76/77...
After researching what's currently available, it seems that the roof racks for 70 series are generally:
A. Expensive
B. Large and heavy
C. A bit of both
So... time to DIY! and despite my running joke of CAD being Cardboard Aided Design, there is a place and time for Computer Aided Design, and I'm glad I took that class in High School. (Thanks Mr. Wilson!)
It's time to design a roof rack!
I took the general design ideas of several I'd seen:
- The full gutter design to distribute weight.
- The foot design of the one above that "Bob" from I Like To Make Stuff also used on his 80 series DIY roof rack.
- Using extruded aluminum for cross bars to keep weight down. (Which I then decided against, and will just have 4 bars out of steel like I currently have because it's worked out super well so far)
I made the front angle of the side pieces the same as the windshield of the 70 so it'll be a continuous slope for a wind deflector to keep things quiet. And the rear is the same angle as the rear barn doors for symmetry. I also made it tall enough keep the fold down mount for the Aussie Style GMRS radio antenna that I've been running. I'll try to remember to have the cross bars spaced so that I can have a set of maxx traxx held up there. If not, I can always add another cross bar out of extruded aluminum.
And in traditional "There's no kill like overkill" and "Go big or go home, moderation is for cowards" fashion

I had the main rails cut out of 3/16 sheet steel at Metals & Alloys over in Lexington where they have a water jet cutter.
I also had the feet cut out of 3/16 steel at send-cut-send, but have since decided to downsize that part of it to 1/8 so I'm waiting for the new feet to arrive (it'll save me 10-11 lbs just for the feet, and 1/8 should be plenty strong)