Steve that's a rack I built some 10 years ago & it's been on at least 4 different trucks, none of which I ever owned! It indeed creeps back ever so often a couple of times left at the overhead door which means it has to be moved out of our way until the owner gets around to tell us what he needs...which will probably mean mounting it on a new truck. This time no different but he wanted it painted & then mounted, well it's been painted & it's really in the way till he shows back up. I'm going to call it the boomerang rack from the outback, which is where it's headed tomorrow morning.
Guys working out of my boxes never get thing back in the right drawers or on the correct peg or shelf so I spend my time looking for and reorganizing etc. lol, I'm a bit of a craggy old guy as well. What looks like scrap to someone else is often a one off tool I often use, so searching the scrap barrels is also a creep factor. I've lost at least half of my dimple dies over the last few years that I crafted from stainless one rainy day, not stolen because only 1/2 of each die is missing. Another rainy day project I suppose.
As you know Steve in order to fab certain types of metal custom work it helps if you naturally see things in 3 dimensions. I've painted and sculpted wildlife art for many years & learned early on that "reduction" of simple solid forms to form complex shapes, in interesting proportions, are visualizations which come to me quite naturally in sculpting & also aids when drawing and painting too. Bar stock aluminum in rounds or flats lends itself to reduction through grinding it's pretty soft. It's not a fast task but on one offs it's about the only thing that makes sense to me. The steel motor mounts were formed the same way & they were kinda fun. The resulting work ends up looking a bit like it was cast, and is aged & definitely wasn't milled on a CNC. The "Chuckle head" rocker covers will require a lot more work but the size & shape has already revealed itself to me. Rick C.