Free: Contests & Raffles.
They are not for me but I appreciate all the free hand tools I find alongside the road. A guy I knew put a really cool looking aluminum one on his dodge and he made the comment that it was so light that he lacked traction in the rear.
I have multiple second GEN Dodge trucks, my 98 1/2. I have a flatbed that I built on it and absolutely love it. If you’re building your own, consider doing tiedowns like I did where I used a piece of 2 inch flat bar in have it run the whole side of the Flatbed and it has standoffs every 6 inches welded on so you can put straps all the way down the side, having strapping points in multiple places and it’s a good bump stop if something hits it if you build it strong enough. The only thing I would have done different on mine and I may still do is cut a hole in the bed and put a access panel so I can change my sending unit on my fuel tank without having to pull the bed off. I also made toolbox mounts underneath on both sides. That work really slick. For sideboards I had a buddy that has a sawmill cut me dug fir that’s 2 inches thick and then I used you channel bolted to that and they drop into pockets and they’re about 18 inches high the back one on the inside when I painted it, I took sand and put it all over in the paint on the inside. That way I can just lift the back board off and I can set it against my rear bumper and I can use it as a ramp to walk up to load and unload things that works really good specially if you get a roadkill deer, you can drag it right up the ramp into the truck. make sure you put good backup lights in it also.