After a few months of pondering how I wanted to do this and referring to the f150 forums, I finally finished my homemade bike rack. I wanted something I can easily take off so I can still use my truck flip tonneau cover. You can buy stuff like this off the shelf from Thule or Yakima, but man is it pricey. $1k give or take for rails and cross bars.
So here you go, I scored some scrap 1.5" square tubing, then maybe $50-$75 in stake pocket anchors and hardware.
I just have to undo the 4 hand knobs on the cross bars, then the whole cross/bike tray assembly lifts off and put in storage when not in use, which then gives me use of the tri flip cover again. The rails I'll keep on permanently.
A fraction of the cost of off the shelf stuff. Not sure how much 1.5" tubing is, but 4 pieces at roughly 6' can't be that much.
I have another few bike trays coming in the mail to finish it out, which will make the cross bar assembly even sturdier when I take it off.
Luckily my neighbor had a chop saw and drill press, that made much quicker work of what little cutting and drilling I had. I am NOT a fabricator, but I was able to manage this, not without mistakes of course.
The last thing I want to do is cut off about 2-3" of the bike tire tray in the rear so I can actually flip my first section of the cover up and it will stay while this is on. As it is, it goes to about a 80deg angle, so it just falls.

So here you go, I scored some scrap 1.5" square tubing, then maybe $50-$75 in stake pocket anchors and hardware.
I just have to undo the 4 hand knobs on the cross bars, then the whole cross/bike tray assembly lifts off and put in storage when not in use, which then gives me use of the tri flip cover again. The rails I'll keep on permanently.
A fraction of the cost of off the shelf stuff. Not sure how much 1.5" tubing is, but 4 pieces at roughly 6' can't be that much.
I have another few bike trays coming in the mail to finish it out, which will make the cross bar assembly even sturdier when I take it off.
Luckily my neighbor had a chop saw and drill press, that made much quicker work of what little cutting and drilling I had. I am NOT a fabricator, but I was able to manage this, not without mistakes of course.
The last thing I want to do is cut off about 2-3" of the bike tire tray in the rear so I can actually flip my first section of the cover up and it will stay while this is on. As it is, it goes to about a 80deg angle, so it just falls.



