Hmmmm, where to start...?
ShadE - That thought crossed my mind more than a few times. It crosses my mind every time my thought process comes up against a design roadblock. But I have a blast finding ways to krawl over those roadblocks. Designing it is more fun for me than using it.
Catcher - I agree that rotating those Y-rotation bars beyond horizontal (180 degrees) would be bad. We'd lose light and bang the side of the truck. Bad bad bad! I agree completely, a flood light would definitely be more practical in the rear. I'm never going to be going in reverse fast enough to need light pointed 100 yards away. I need an even blanket of light in a 30 yard radius a lot more.
kkkustom - Thanks for the props on my drawings! I posted those completely expecting at least one flame because I whipped them out really quick.

I have a Master's degree in studio art and I've worked as a technical flat sketcher in the past. Anyway, it's the least I can contribute to the worthwhile cause that is LOST design and fabrication.
The new bars look K-A$$! If I had read your original design plans better and known that you were welding the bar to the brackets, I would have warned you about the stock rail taper.
I'll call you and we can brainstorm. But in the meantime...
I did some measuring and position testing last night (picture me standing in a dark driveway with an old broomstick, a flashlight, and a tape measure). I came to the conclusion (right around the same time that Catcher did...10PMish) that 1/2 width bar just isn't going to cut it. A 2' radius just isn't enough to provide the kinda light that we need from a design that we've been working on so much.
So I started brainstorming full bar rotation. I started with the Y-axis rotation, but quickly ran into a logistical problem. The depth of the light itself makes this concept incredibly complicated (at the very least) . When the bars are laid flat, the light(s) will overlap the other bar(s). Does that make sense? In other words, to rotate the first bar up and away, you'd have to move the second bar (at least the light on the second bar) out of the way first. But you can't move the second bar before you move the first bar, that's why I'm calling it "the first bar"...'cause it's gotta move first. So the resolution to this is to mount the lights in drastically fore and aft (of the center bar) alternating positions. Not the prettiest concept.
So I started thinking about the X-axis bar, which wasn't a big jump since it's admittedly my favorite design. With an approx 4' radius, the X-axis pivot design is almost perfect! Check it out...
