These vertical welds were done top to bottom using that technique I recommended.
Two things I have learned about vertical welding that make a huge difference. Pull it from top to bottom, don't push it bottom to top unless you absolutely have to. Bump your wire speed up a little above the normal horizontal setting recommended/used. Also I always use an overhand cursive e motion now regardless of orientation. Much easier to keep consistent @sreidmx









. But i was looking at Blazito, now under ownership of BJ Baldwin, and got some ideas for the triangulation of the rearward behind the back seats. Also, is there anyway that I can do this and be able to have a third row seat? I really want to try and do that. I think it would be so cool and set it apart from a lot of other blazers if I could pull it off. I also would love to take more than 3 people wheeling at one time. Took out the seats to get a fresh slate to work with so have at it folks. This way, if my truck breaks.......I CAN BLAME IT ON Y'ALL!!! bahahaha jk 


.....i am 
Also, on the topic of welding, before I start cutting my precious tubing, I would like to get some tips and ideas on where i should add more triangulation/tie ins on my cage from the front seats back to the rear. This is requiring a lot of patience for me so please hurryyyyy.....lol jk....kinda. But i was looking at Blazito, now under ownership of BJ Baldwin, and got some ideas for the triangulation of the rearward behind the back seats. Also, is there anyway that I can do this and be able to have a third row seat? I really want to try and do that. I think it would be so cool and set it apart from a lot of other blazers if I could pull it off. I also would love to take more than 3 people wheeling at one time. Took out the seats to get a fresh slate to work with so have at it folks. This way, if my truck breaks.......I CAN BLAME IT ON Y'ALL!!! bahahaha jk
.....i am
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I don't have any stock seats. just 4 prp suspension seats. 2 up front. 2 in back. I have a 3rd row seat from a navigator that i made mounts for the third row out back,(pics earlier in thread), but it was huge and a pain to put in and try and get to fit. I was thinking about getting a bench seat out of a jeep, those are not wide and have a low profile, or just get 2 more suspension seats.3rd row seat? In addition to the stock 2nd row seat? A 3rd seat is a pretty tight squeeze in a K5 (I've mocked it up, but never though it worthwhile for the tiny amount of legroom it would have). FWIW, putting a 60/40 bench seat in the front and running stock rear gives you 6 seats using common stock parts (looks like you would only need the passenger side if you wanted to go that route).
If you did go that route, I'd grab a rear seat from a 90s extended cab. Short seat takes up less room than trying to fit a full-size seat back there. If the cage tubing will allow (of course).
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For triangles in the roof section, do you mean like an X in the roof connecting all the corners or an X that makes triangles out of the corners and a square in the middle of the roof?If your pics are up to date you need triangles in the roof section. Also in the b pillar. If they can't wiggle around the bracing they don't deserve the ride.
Super helpful! thanks!Ok here is a few race trucks I found while looking for ideas. It's hard to see but it's kinda hard to find a backhalfed gm anything.. But basically I would try to box in the structure around the shocks first, one thing people forget is to add both lateral horizontal and vertical tie ins, the forces are not always in one or two directions.
Think big rectangle then ad V or /\ depending on if you have the axle landing or a tube landing at the point.
It's really hard to explain.. I'll dig more for pics.
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This is a good example of the V idea, see where the bump stop is on the frame, that's a point of force, you want those points to be where the tubes converge, if you do not cope he tube properly for a tight joint you might as well not do it at all because you will compromise the strength of the cage. False security is the worst kind.
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Ah yeah this all makes a lot of sense for sure. i am a more visual learner but I think I am getting the gist of what you're saying.All of those lol.
The b pillar and c pillar on yours need bracing. This is what resists the cage folding in a hard side impact. Hard side impacts in prerunning are very common.
The b pillar is the hoop that goes from side to side behind the front seats. I base my cages off this bar. If that hoop holds up you can survive some brutal rollovers.
The c pillar is the last side to side hoop in the car. If you are carrying passengers this is just as important as the b pillar.
An x brace on these is ideal. But a half x or a \/ or any number of diagonal bracing is fine.
In the roof it's the same thing x braces diagonal bracing of any kind.
Squares are rectangles are weak sauce. Triangles are awesome sauce
But since yours is already welded together you might have to get creative with some additional tube gussets.
Dead nodes, which are tubes that end into another tube with no tube backing up the opposite side are bad.
It's all about spreading the load out.
Even with your cage supporting the body thing. The load was concentrated and not being spread out much.
Trust me when I say cutting off the frame will do zero for weight savings. You end up adding enough tube to make up for the frame.
Another thing to think about when your trying to lose weight. These trucks are nosr heavy. If you lose weight in back you actually might be making the truck worse. Pretty much impossible to get 50/50 weight distribution without major mods so putting as much weight in the back is good. To a point of course.
Adding weight for the sake of adding weight is not good
