Thanks. I do my own fabin' (with the exception of some 4130 trailing arm mods on another project that need to be pre and post heated and because I still suck at tig welding tubing). There isn't a statue on the books that prohibits a front mounted spare. If they were prohibited, there would be a lot of bummed out hippies running around in their '69 Bays. I wouldn't call it a spear either (perhaps a mega-size hemorrhoid cushion). Now bicycles mounted on the front of a city bus, that's a spear. If I do one, I'd fab the mount as low as possible to get the the top of the tire close to the top of the grill guard, so to avoid visibility issues. Having the winch cable go through the center hole would set the spare much too low. I use the winch at least once a month (I winch out out huge dumpster every month and with 19.5 wheels, well, I've even used the winch for self recovery because 19.5s suck), so accessibility is a concern for me (I might have to give it up though given other factors). Carl had both visibility issues and cooling issues with his Alumines setup. My rig has improved cooling over his model year (or I could actually be off by one year and we have the same, but I think his is a '12, with less efficient cooling). Regardless, my would be mounted lower so neither of those concerns should be an issue (although you never know for sure until you try). My front axle rating is 7,250# and it's a very beefy 5 link system. I have more than enough buffer to install an Alcoa, rubber and a mount. My setup weighs a fraction of a large snow plow setup that is common on these pigs. That said, as I posted above, I'm more likely to go with a dual mount setup out back and see how that pans out first. I have a design in mind that I think will work well. If not, then I'll give a single front mount for an alloy a go. Thanks again.