2014.10.01 - UPDATE! - OOOOOPS...!!!
I'm not too proud to admit a mistake, and not so self-absorbed that I can't give credit where credit is due.....
Mike (NorCal69) texted me last night and noticed something in my build that I had completely overlooked.

It's a bummer, but I'm glad that he saw it NOW so that I can fix it before it became a heartbreaker later on.
In my recent zeal to add cageplate shims all over the place I lost track of an important detail that I'd previously gotten right.
Here's the look of the original cage plates I'd mocked-up a couple of years ago...
Just a small 4" x 4" square plate made out of some 3/16" flat stock. When I pulled the bedside off, I guess I was tempted to really stretch out those plates a bit more to take advantage of the space.... and since I had shims worked out, there was no reason not to allow the plates to "span" across an extra valley (or two!) in the floor.
Well, it turns out there actually WAS a reason why I made the original plate the size I did, and specifically why I offset it so strongly toward the inside of the truck..... if the plates get any wider than that, I won't be able to remove the rollcage later on for final welding and finishing!!!


So..... my new beautiful cage plates are going to need to change a bit. I think the solution might be pretty simple: If I rotate them 90-degrees, the "long side" will run front-to-back, and the width will be 4" (across) just like the old plates were. This could end up being a pretty simple fix..... but I'm glad Mike saw it when he did, or it would have been a lot bigger hassle to resolve.
Anyway... moving on.
Last night I worked on the new design for the B-pillar triangulation bars. Now that I have a strong rectangular support beam directly underneath those 4 cage attachment points, it's less important where I land those angled bars..... since I can now support them strongly regardless of where they land on the floor.
I played around with a few options, but the final spacing put the tubes about 18" apart (at the floor) so that climbing into the back seat will be a lot easier than it was with the tubes forming a sharp "V" at the floor.
Here's the first bar going into position.....
Since the 4 bars are all supposed to be in the same plane, I clamped them all to a common straightedge to force them into alignment...
Once the first bar was fitted up, I used the fishmouths to create a paper "wrapper" and transferred those patterns to the driver side tube. That saved me a bunch of tedious fitment and cutting time.
The end result, with just a few tack welds per tube to lock everything down...
....and here's the shot from the passenger side where people would actually load in to the back seat area. I put the center console in there temporarily also, just to block-out the space it will need and to confirm that it's still possible to step in / up / over those areas.
Good forward progress...... with just a touch of backward progress.
-G