To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

The Atomic Bed Rack

Status
Not open for further replies.

Ryan

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Jan 26, 2006
Messages
5,714
Location
Texas/Hawaii
A great bed rack option for the Diamondback bed cover is the unit offered by Front Runner. It's made incredibly well and does what it is designed to do perfect...

To read the rest of this blog entry from The Garage Journal, click here.

.
 
Last edited:
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

4xdog

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 18, 2012
Messages
5,604
Location
Santa Fe, NM
Cool! I've not seen those Front Runner mounting rails before, Ryan.

I have South African Front Runner bed rails on my Gen 2 Tacoma, which mount to the C-channels on the bed sides. The rails get used for my ARB rooftop tent. Very sturdy, and beautifully made, as you noted.

i-d6qvQxt-X5.jpg


I've just finished modifying my old Gen 1 Tacoma Mountain Top aluminium tonneau to fit the Gen 2 truck. (My use case needs a bicycle fork mount more than maker materials, so the one-piece Mountain Top lets the tonneau lift with the bike tray in place. That long-out-of-production tonneau uses Perrycraft Dynasport side rails.

I gotta see if the existing holes in the tonneau might allow those nifty Front Runner tracks to fit... I really like that fitment on your Diamond Back.

-- Don

i-jrxp8N9-X5.jpg
 
OP
R

Ryan

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Jan 26, 2006
Messages
5,714
Location
Texas/Hawaii
Cool! I've not seen those Front Runner mounting rails before, Ryan.

I have South African Front Runner bed rails on my Gen 2 Tacoma, which mount to the C-channels on the bed sides. The rails get used for my ARB rooftop tent. Very sturdy, and beautifully made, as you noted.

i-d6qvQxt-X5.jpg


I've just finished modifying my old Gen 1 Tacoma Mountain Top aluminium tonneau to fit the Gen 2 truck. (My use case needs a bicycle fork mount more than maker materials, so the one-piece Mountain Top lets the tonneau lift with the bike tray in place. That long-out-of-production tonneau uses Perrycraft Dynasport side rails.

I gotta see if the existing holes in the tonneau might allow those nifty Front Runner tracks to fit... I really like that fitment on your Diamond Back.

-- Don

i-jrxp8N9-X5.jpg

It's interesting... I thought my 1/2-ton GMC was at the very limit I could live with as far as size goes. I just didn't think going any smaller would work for me, but... I was given a tacoma test truck for a bit and oddly fell in love with it.

I say oddly, because I think the motor is incredibly inappropriate for a truck (not much torque at low rpm) and the transmission is out dated and works too hard to compensate for the lack of torque and US fuel economy numbers... It just hunts far too much...

I've even tuned mine and it's still not great... But I love the truck anyway. It's just very honest and "trucky" if that makes sense. In fact, it feels more like my '64 F100 than my '18 GMC did...

And the size? Man... I love the mid-sized form factor. Now that I have this bed rack on the thing, it's as capable for the stuff that I haul as my GMC was... and I can fling it into economy parking spots. It feels sooo tiny...

What I would love to do is drive this thing for a year or two and then go to a used low-mileage 200-series Land Cruiser. I doubt that happens, but a boy can dream... And I really want to build a lumber hauling roof rack for one of those.

Ohhh... And BTW, I think the 2nd get tacoma is the best looking post 1990 truck ever made... I love those things and yours is GREAT.
 

Mainiac Mat

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 2, 2020
Messages
402
Location
Maine
Looks cool and very flexible for recreation uses...

Maybe not so much for work... at least not construction/carpentry.
 
OP
R

Ryan

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Jan 26, 2006
Messages
5,714
Location
Texas/Hawaii
Looks cool and very flexible for recreation uses...

Maybe not so much for work... at least not construction/carpentry.

I use it mostly for hauling 8' materials - both 4x8 sheets of plywood and tube steel. In hobby like quantities... For that, it's fantastic...

But, yeah - anything longer than 8' and I'm pretty sure it would ****.
 

MOTODOJO

Member
Joined
Mar 14, 2013
Messages
20
Location
Tejas
As far as any thing 8' and beyond, make an adjustable extension that plugs into the receiver hitch.
 
OP
R

Ryan

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Jan 26, 2006
Messages
5,714
Location
Texas/Hawaii
As far as any thing 8' and beyond, make an adjustable extension that plugs into the receiver hitch.

I had planned on making a flip out or detachable extension to the tailgate side rack to fully support 8' material and longer stuff... It would be really easy to do and fun to engineer... But I've been using this thing for a couple of months now and have found I don't need it as I don't really haul anything longer than 8'.
 

Bert_

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 24, 2016
Messages
9,716
Location
NW Iowa
Maybe someone can explain. What does it do vs just putting stuff in the bed? Are you using it for wider material that won't lay flat in the bed?

I wouldn't mind a ladder rack for hauling 20' pipe. Otherwise have to use a trailer.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
OP
R

Ryan

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Jan 26, 2006
Messages
5,714
Location
Texas/Hawaii
Maybe someone can explain. What does it do vs just putting stuff in the bed? Are you using it for wider material that won't lay flat in the bed?

I wouldn't mind a ladder rack for hauling 20' pipe. Otherwise have to use a trailer.

Yes, it's a mid sized truck... so, full sized sheets of plywood won't fit between the wheel wells in the bed. Alternatively, you could build something to support plywood over the wheel wells, but that doesn't make sense in my use case.
 

Bert_

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 24, 2016
Messages
9,716
Location
NW Iowa
Yes, it's a mid sized truck... so, full sized sheets of plywood won't fit between the wheel wells in the bed. Alternatively, you could build something to support plywood over the wheel wells, but that doesn't make sense in my use case.

Makes sense.

Gm in the 90's has notches in the bed where you could put a 2x4 across the bed. Was just above the wheel wells where it was wider.
 
OP
R

Ryan

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Jan 26, 2006
Messages
5,714
Location
Texas/Hawaii
Makes sense.

Gm in the 90's has notches in the bed where you could put a 2x4 across the bed. Was just above the wheel wells where it was wider.

The Tacoma has that as well, but you still have to figure out support on the tailgate. I considered doing something with that, but I couldn't think of a way to have all that support accessible at all times and not have something bulky in my bed. I have old car parts and other random **** in my bed like 90% of the time and need the space...
 

4xdog

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 18, 2012
Messages
5,604
Location
Santa Fe, NM
Ryan, the universal tracks as described on the Front Runner website are stated to have no pre-drilling. I like that idea -- it would help any project for my truck -- but from the video on your project and the images on the FR site, it looks like there might be predrilled mounting holes. Not that too many holes would be a deal breaker, but what was your experience?

-- Don

Here's their 200mm / 8" nominal track length (10.5" / 237mm OAL) universal track:
https://www.frontrunneroutfitters.c...d-bar-components/universal-track-200mm-l.html

trca009.jpg


trca009.1.jpg
 
OP
R

Ryan

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Jan 26, 2006
Messages
5,714
Location
Texas/Hawaii
Hah FrontRunner is here in my neighborhood. One of my good friends does a lot of their custom installs and R&D

Compliments to your pal man... Cuz their stuff is over the top nice. In fact, I'd call those load bars some of the nicest extrusions I've ever seen. They are crazy nice...

Ryan, the universal tracks as described on the Front Runner website are stated to have no pre-drilling. I like that idea -- it would help any project for my truck -- but from the video on your project and the images on the FR site, it looks like there might be predrilled mounting holes. Not that too many holes would be a deal breaker, but what was your experience?

-- Don

Here's their 200mm / 8" nominal track length (10.5" / 237mm OAL) universal track:
https://www.frontrunneroutfitters.c...d-bar-components/universal-track-200mm-l.html

trca009.jpg


trca009.1.jpg

My starting point was a Front Runner kit for the Diamondback. And they are pre-drilled for the diamondback - which made things quicker for me.

However, I wouldn't be scare of drilling the universal bars at all. Just be sure to countersink appropriately and you should be good.
 
OP
R

Ryan

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Jan 26, 2006
Messages
5,714
Location
Texas/Hawaii
This feature was deleted... and then republished here:

 
Status
Not open for further replies.
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom