Hi Jeff,
When building the fenders, would it be cost prohibitive, to add support flanges to attach mudflaps?
Thinking as an Overlander versus someone just trying to make a pretty Jeep, tear away flaps (so they don't damage the fender if they get ripped away), would be a huge advantage over any aftermarket fender currently on the market. Especially if the design incorporated the ability for the flap to extend up the side for additional width, keeping the majority of grit and grime off the doors.
I'd even be willing to forgo fender top cup holders for a flap feature...
It should be fairly easy to implement that option. I may not do it in the first set of fenders out of the molds, but I'll keep it in mind so I don't do anything in the design or mold making process that precludes it or makes it prohibitively expensive to implement.Exactly!
Mounting similar to the Mopar flaps with plastic push pins. This would be an awesome option.
I would install the flat fenders on my JKU to make sure they fit properly, but once that's done they'd come off. Maybe I'd find someone else who wanted to run them on their Jeep after I verified the fit.
I don't think I've ever posted a photo in this thread, but a while back I did a set of flat fenders for the TJ. I've never used them on my Jeeps, so they turned out to be an art project as well. They're more complicated than the JK flat fender design because they also include inner fenders to make them a 100% bolt-on installation.
They did get installed briefly on a mockup of a pickup proof-of-concept that used one of my fiberglass Jeep-tub trailers as a bed, but other than that they've never been used or installed on anything.
That project used several of my designs - the TJ flat fenders, the fiberglass trailer tub as a bed, and a half-cab version of the LJ/TJ Safari Cab modular hardtop. Oh and my "Cool Cowl" cold air intake cowl kit, that's the red part in the photo above with the air cap on it. I also mocked up another one of my art projects on the proof-of-concept pickup, the TJ Commando Kit. Other than this mockup and another test install, that project has never been used either, but it was a fun art project to build .
Sorry for going off-topic with so many of my art projects.
You don't have to hit the lottery to buy the pickup bed, it's about $800, sold as a trailer tub kit by Dinoot.com. But the TJ Commando kit and the TJ flat fenders aren't production parts, so hitting the lottery might help with those .Oh my, I do like that front end, and those fenders, and that bed... need to hit the lottery so I can have you apply a few of your art projects to my TJ...