Hi Jeff,
thanks for all the design and build related posts here in this forum.
Nowadays someone like you is called an influencer. I think you're the prototype version of it, to describe it with in a designers vocabulary ;-)
Glad you find my posts useful. I do hope I influence people to try their own projects, most of what I do isn't hard if you do a thorough design and break down the project into small steps, each of which is easy to complete.
I am currently also in an building project and have some questions:
You did a lot of molle panels with sheet metal. Can you describe this process more detailed? Especially how to cut all the holes accurately. I thing you mentioned, that you use a jigsaw? Do you have sheet metal brake for your bendings?
What is your experience with metal molle panels: do molle straps wear out on the metal edges?
To make a Molle panel, I first draw the design on my computer and print it out. Usually the designs are larger than a sheet of paper, so I print it across multiple sheets and tape it together. Before I do anything in metal I mock up the paper/cardstock printout in place, in the two photos below I'm mocking up the overhead/swing-down Molle panel (soon to be released as a product BTW, a company has picked up the design).
Once I'm happy with the design I tape the printout to the sheet metal and I centerpunch all holes and hole centers for the larger holes - I always include center marks on the printout of all holes to be drilled. I can then remove the printout and drill 1/8" pilot holes at all center punch marks. Even if the hole is to only be 1/4", I still drill a 1/8" pilot hole because a small drill has much less tendency to wander and I want to keep everything as accurate as possible.
I then drill all holes to their final size; for the Molle slots I drill the ends of the slot with a hole saw and then cut out the middle with a jigsaw with a metal-cutting blade. A template and the final product (which has already been through the bending brake in this photo) are shown in this photo:
The jigsaw and a hole saw (this is a different panel than the one above):
I do have a bending brake, it's home made and is capable of 30"-long bends in lighter sheet metal but for a long bend in heavy sheet metal I go to a local fabrication shop and do the bending on one of their brakes. There's a shop in town that's very friendly to my projects and they let me use their brakes whenever I need to bend something big. If you don't have a friendly shop around, you can probably pay a shop a few dollars to do the bending for you, the bending is the only part you may not be able to do at home, assuming you have a printer, drill and jigsaw to do the rest. Another thing I occasionally do at the fab shop is use their Metalworker to punch the large starter holes for the Molle slots rather than hole saw them at home. The end result is the same but if there are a lot of slots sometimes it's quicker for me to drive to their shop and punch the holes than it is to drill them all at home.
I haven't had any issues with Molle straps getting worn by the edges of the metal slots, but I'm pretty careful to remove any sharp edges.
The second topic with a lot of questions ist "sew a softtop", but I think, that I will open an own thread and invite you giving feedback, so I don't highjack yours...
Happy to give whatever advice and help I can with that project, just point me to your thread when you''re ready.