Yeah, but, you got it stuck in the rocks and now you're broke down.
Haha believe it or not it just clears the keys.Yeah, but, you got it stuck in the rocks and now you're broke down.
Great Idea! The cross member is at about a 15° angle so using angle iron Sounds a lot easier than cutting the pipe flat across at that angle. I'm not entirely sure why it would need to be removable but who knows maybe that could be handy at some point down the road.You could notch into the crossmember to fit the hoop partly inside and gain a lot of weld surface. You could also make some simple brackets out of angle iron that sit on both sides of the hoop, even taper one edge to match the angle of the hoop so it lines up at the outermost surface. Using brackets like this would let you make it a bolt-on.
View attachment 468278
I tried to put it flat against the cross member but the angle put it too far forward right over the u joint and if it broke there I couldn't guarantee the safety loop would hold it. Running it straight up and down off the back put it in the right spot to retain the driveshaft, now the discussion is how to attach it. Also keep in mind whatever is left hanging off the bottom of the cross member will be cut off.If the angle is too much and there is space you could just V notch the tube ends to overlap the top rear corner of the crossmember, would be simple and quick.
If this was the plow truck I'd say a mouse circ de sole routine but in this application, just a parking brake.What are the cables for?….![]()

Running it straight up and down off the back put it in the right spot to retain the driveshaft, now the discussion is how to attach it...