Dude, you didn't build all the bracketry before you posted a pic.

What if it needs to change again???..what about all the practice you'll be missing out on???
What is happening to this thread?

The tuition pile is going to be lonely without its new friends.
Don't worry Mike, I'll keep wasting plenty of steel..... some things never change!
So last night, I decided to cut off those parallel rails from the bedrail area so that I could get the stock rear seat back into it's original location....
Maybe I can re-bend these into rear shock hoops instead of throwing them into the tuition pile?
I carefully measured-out the holes in the factory floor (the removed part) and then dropped some 1"x2" tubing across the framerails to simulate the missing floor height and also the correct setback for the seat brackets. I wanted to take a fresh look at where the factory seat landed now that the extra bedrail tubes were removed, and also now that the upper mount of the rear struts was going to be a LOT lower than with my previous "tower" design....
Here's the attic view of the seat in position....
Incredibly, the struts can ALMOST be mounted vertically (front-to-back).... the best I could manage without moving the seat forward was about a 3* backward angle... not nearly as bad as I'd imagined.
Depending on how much time I want to spend talking to "enthusiasts" who tell me I angled my struts the wrong way, I can either leave it AS-IS (3* backwards) or just move the seat forward by maybe 1"... and get the struts at exactly 90* instead.
I took a bunch of measurements off the tubing to the framerails, seat, strut,etc. and think I have enough information to do a PencilCAD drawing of the area so I can design a proper mount that will fit in that space.
(Or at least a mount that can ALMOST fit, then gets removed so I can build a v2 mount that works better.....just before building the v3 mount that will look and work AWESOME.)
-G