Appreciate the replies guys.
db, I hope you know I took a lot of inspiration from your burban poptop. Still got the photo on my desktop. Love that thing! And I actually like the white on black you have but it helps that you have the original roof thats obviously white.
DD196, thanks for that info I knew it was a lot but not that high but I sure believe it now.
Rayra, I totally agree with your philosophy here and have been following PappaWheely's build of constant change. I dont mind the burden if it's unavoidable, I like to get things right. But I think that my plan as is might be structurally sound enough and I'll get to some photos in a minute and see what you guys think.
In terms of finishing for UV, I'm not at all worried about my flaws and inconsistencies, they display the work it took me to get there and I'm fine with that as long as it works, if someone wants to get up close and tell me about it, i'll gladly let them ha. That being said If I can cover them with rhino lining for a good price then I may do that. Ive talked to a guy and he says that they can put it on as thick or thin as you'd like, so its a possibility if it wont add much weight. On top of that I believe he said he could do other colors, even white perhaps.. I'll investigate. Anyone have experience with the stuff?
I guess I'm really just trying to keep it looking congruent with the vehicle, I love it all black and think it may look funny being white, what do you guys think? My plan was this, do a couple gel coats and then have the whole thing rhino lined essentially adding three layers of uv protectant. My question is do you guys think I will still have problems down the road. I know it will heat up but will it eventually start cracking, and becoming structually weak? A final thought would be to have the top white and sides black/dark charcoal to match...
Anyway.
So I put in some work last night both on the top and on the hinges. I got them a couple days ago from Derrek who had them welded to my specifications. We made them a little bulkier than what he would do for the astros. I originally had the 12in stroke actuators but they didn't put the roof as high as I wanted so I swapped them with 18in ones. He welded me the mounts and I got them all put together.
Heres a photo of them mocked up on the roof with the help from my brother. If you can tell the curve of the roof raises the ends of the track off the vehicle. Do you guys think I'll be okay with filling that gap with some large grade 8 washers, or should I use laid steel flat stock so there aren't gaps?
Spent most of the day attempting to shim this piece of 1/2 in birch sanded plywood to be flat against the contour of the roof, which is concave both left to right and front to back. But I dialed it in so there is enough good connection points I think. Haven't epoxied it down yet because I need to do the back one first. As you can see I finished the wooden rails as well.
So the plan is that the two cross beams of the hinges will rest on the ply. The front one will be clasped down in place as it doesnt move relative to its position above the vehicle. The back will slide across the back ply in a wooden track that will be covered over. The main problem you guys will see is my cantilevered and overhung roof as shown here, with racks mocked up:
Obviously a problem when the roof is loaded down but I've already decided that I will manually help the lifts for the 40 seconds it takes to raise it if theres load up there. They will do it no problem without load. Ive talked to derrek and he says beyond 150-200 lbs roof included the hinges start to bend, so thats why we went with bigger diameter ones. I can always take stuff off before I pop it up too.
To address the cantilever issue I am going to put struts that will be manually raised and rest in all four corners when its popped. That and keeping the load centered over the hinges. Thoughts?
My plan as of now for finishing the inside is to get some 3/4" aluminum square tube at 1/8 thick and epoxy it around inside of the roof edge and screw in L brackets to connect it, then I will sandwich the tent into that between a thin aluminum sheeting with screws. My roof rack bolts will go through the wooden ply sections (why I made them so wide) and through steel 2" flat stock L corners that I'm going to weld into a triangle with 3/8 rod. They will run 5 inches across the wood and all the way up to the aluminum and be epoxied to the sidewall. Before they go on though I am going to fill the wooden corners into a smooth 45 degrees and lay down mat across the wood, existing roof and up all the sidewalls, probably two or three layups on sidewalls. This was my plan to distribute the load straight from the roof rack to the roof of the vehicle and to save money and not have someone weld me an exoskeleton.
Heres a horrible diagram, obviously the fiberglass sidewall isnt cut in half by the tube:
Sorry for the mass amount of explanation, let me know if any of it doesnt make sense and as alwyas I appreciate any and all comments.