Cleaning out the shed today. When this pig finally gets on the road I would like it to have a brush guard. Or, in this region, it's really a deer guard. We have a lot of brush, but we have even more deer, at least on the road. I have a standard CUCV brush guard. This look has been done many times, but it's a reasonable piece and it's an easy bolt-on part.
(Yes, I know it's offset, the bumperettes won't let me center it for a quick-n-dirty picture).
I also have this one, quite heavily built, but patterned for a GMT400 rig. With 1/2" uprights I'm pretty confident this frame would tear apart before anything bent them. I can't raise it into position without removing the air dam, so use your imagination here and picture it 4" higher.
The mounting flanges are wide enough that it should be easy to mount. But it sticks further forward than I would prefer. Even if I brought the wings all the way up to the fender, the nose would still be sticking out a bit.
But the biggest problem in my book is that the headlight opening is only ~9" tall.
The headlights need a minimum of 11" to be reasonable.
The CUCV guard gives it 15"
Pictures of a different CUCV guard on an actual CUCV.
It also sticks out in the nose, but not quite as much as the newer guard.
I'm kinda surprised that the factory brush guard doesn't try to mimic the angled contours of the grille.
I'm thinking the GMT400 guard is too heavy (it's twice the weight of the other one), and it's also not as good of a fit. But I'm also interested in opinions. I've seen guards that infringe on headlight area, is that less of a problem than I realize?
I may or may not keep the stock bumper, haven't decided that yet. The CUCV guard mounts to the stock bumper, so it would be less advantageous if the bumper changes (the direct frame mount would open up other options, bumper-wise).
I think typing this out has convinced me to use the stock guard and pass the newer one along to someone with a newer truck.
