The first
light bars for trucks were roll bars or grill guards that off-road race teams
used to mount lights for night racing. Today, the truck accessory market is
flooded with manufactured light bars that adapt to almost any make of domestic
or import trucks. The roll bar-type accommodates a spread of lights above the
truck cab, while the grill guard-type has lights closer to road level. Making a
bar using steel tubing requires special equipment to bend the tubing. You can
build a light bar using steel channel and steel plate. The only requirements
are shop tools and apprentice-level welding experience.
Instructions
. 1
Measure the width
of the truck bed. Measure the height from the bed rails to the top of the cab.
Cut one piece of 3-inch-by-3-inch steel channel as the top of the bar that
spans the width of the bed. Cut two pieces to the height measurement as
uprights at each end of the bar. Cut the steel channel using a mitre saw with a
metal cutting blade.
.
. 2
Position the
pieces of channel on edge with the channel recesses facing in. This gives you a
protected channel to run the light wires. Align an upright perpendicular at
each end of the top bar. Square the corners using a framing square and weld the
uprights to the top bar.
.
. 3
Cut two pieces of
3/16-inch-by-2 1/2-inch steel plate 24 inches long as base plates that bolt to
the top of the bed rails. Use a drill press and a steel drill bit to drill
three holes, evenly spaced in the flat surface of the bar for bolts. Typical
attachments are made with 3/16-inch carriage bolts.
.
. 4
Position the base
plates flat, and parallel at the width of the light bar. Stand the three-sided
roll bar atop the plates and align the uprights with the end of the plates.
Weld the uprights to the base plates.
.
. 5
Measure and cut
two additional pieces of 3-inch-by-3-inch steel channel as diagonal braces for
the light bar. The braces span from the top corners of the bar to the end of
the corresponding base plate.
.
. 6
Position the
diagonal braces with the flat side of the channel facing up. Weld the braces at
each end of the top bar and the corresponding ends of the base plates.
.
. 7
Cut pieces of the
3/6-inch-by-2 1/2-inch steel plate 6 inches long as mounts for the lights. Cut
as many pieces as needed to accommodate a particular spread of lights. Drill
1/2-inch holes in the centre of each mount.
.
. 8
Make layout marks
at the top bar for the spread of lights using a bolt or metal file. Stand one
of the mounts atop the top bar at a layout mark with the flat sides of the
mount facing forward and back. Weld the base of the mount to the top of the
bar.