Great pictures. Got a question about your rack system. What is it? How are those long rails attached to the roof and how do the racks attach to those rails? Are the rails thru bolted? When I had my Northstar TS 1000 roof apart for repairs I learned that the solid material stopped back from the edge and there was styrofoam to make the curved edge. I thru bolted Yakima gutter mounts on the sides of the roof and I've been relatively happy with it (4 cross bars) but I think the adjustability of your rails would be desireable. I typically carry canoes or kayaks up there. You may be able to see my system in this photo.View attachment 438972
Thanks. I think that picture was taken on Conejos Pass if I'm not mistaken. Interesting that yours has that sheet metal bullnose. Mine has metal 90 degree angle pieces periodically to connect the sides to the top but nothing over the styrofoam that I could see. I definitely like the versatility of your rack but mind has to be higher due to the curved sheerline of most canoes when they are turned upside down. Even though my crossbars are about 4-5" above the roof I have to place some canoes carefully or the tip of the bow will ride on the roof surface. It's why I have 4 crossbars--so I can get both solo and tandem canoes placed and tied without hitting the roof surface. I could probably get away with three. The rear most rack has a piece of 2" abs pipe over it to make it slippery so I can easily push canoes up on to it. Do you have a crank mechanism for your roof? I modified a sailboat winch handle, installing the Heco gear head in it so I could get more leverage than the original short handle provides. I can crank my roof up easily by myself with 180-200lbs of boats on it.
SiThat's Scorpion Bay you surfed, right?