Didn't know this. Got ya bookmarked!@500$k5 builds them in his shop. http://www.westernalternator.com/
Started on it last night. I'm trying to figure out a way to do it without adding a ton of weight.Build a massive skid plate. Stock one is not heavy enough. My 31 gallon tank is probably 25 gallons now.
Interesting...Does it need to cover every inch? On my regal I just bent a chromemoly tube that welds to the frame on each side right behind the tank, bends down and around the tank area, and protects the tank if I wheelie to high. It would work if your departure angle is your tank. You can add 1 or two more pieces of tubing to protect the middle and front of the tank if you really need that, and it wouldn't weigh much, then just make them unbolt from the frame to swap the tank. You would just need to bend up some U shaped pieces of tube that have the correct width and depth to clear your tank and attach to the frame.
You could connect them with some front/back tubing, would be like rock sliders and leave the middle open. Two u shaped pieces and 2 or 3 straight pieces with notched ends. Or the straight pieces could have one bend to follow the tank contour.
That brings up another question too. For those of you that have hit your tank, How far forward have you hit? Could I get away with something that just covered the back half or so?Does it need to cover every inch? You can add 1 or two more pieces of tubing to protect the middle and front of the tank if you really need that
This would work until you slam down on that one pointy rock or root sticking up.Does it need to cover every inch? On my regal I just bent a chromemoly tube that welds to the frame on each side right behind the tank, bends down and around the tank area, and protects the tank if I wheelie to high. It would work if your departure angle is your tank. You can add 1 or two more pieces of tubing to protect the middle and front of the tank if you really need that, and it wouldn't weigh much, then just make them unbolt from the frame to swap the tank. You would just need to bend up some U shaped pieces of tube that have the correct width and depth to clear your tank and attach to the frame.
You could connect them with some front/back tubing, would be like rock sliders and leave the middle open. Two u shaped pieces and 2 or 3 straight pieces with notched ends. Or the straight pieces could have one bend to follow the tank contour.
This is what happens when your junk stays together and you get to wheel it.What mall are you guys going to? Jeez
Must have been the one that got my frame last year.This is what happens when your junk stays together and you get to wheel it.
Interesting...
That could work. I'll have to think about that and see if I like that better. My plan was a full plate (3/16), but I was going to cut a bunch of holes in it to cut down on weight, but then dimple them for strength.
Right now the departure angle is the tank, but I'm also building a rear bumper soon and I want the skid plate to integrate with that. I'm very much designing as I go though, so plans may change.
This would work until you slam down on that one pointy rock or root sticking up.
Pictures of mine for effect. But I am super easy on my truck.

Do that and then a thinner plate of steel than 3/16" to fill in the gaps for extra protection?Wade, how did that happen going 80 through the desert?
On a more serious note, I'm thinking some like this would stop most of that and be a lot lighter and stronger than a sheet skid...of course it would need to bolt to the frame in between the 4 corners, but that's what I would do. The rock would have to be pretty pointy and you would have to be going very slow, which is not my gig so tell me if you think it wouldn't work for your use....
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O too thin. I believe 1/8".@ktmoutfront How thick is the stock skid plate?