One hour of time, can of paint and a few welding rods ($5 total) 20min to install.
This is it.
http://i27.tinypic.com/261e04k.jpg
jb, Wind your watch. Or... if you can do that kind of work in an hour you can come to work for me anytime! It took me an hour just to find and gather suitable materials, design the attachments, and cut a cardboard template for trial fit.
My "afternoon" was the entire job, "parked in shed" to "parked in shed". I put the front wheels up on ramps in the shop for creeper and work clearance. Reviewing some old TBN posts, field measuring, overall concept/design/working sketch, cutting, bending, welding, drilling, grinding, took a bit over another couple hours.
Gotcha beat on install time though...mine goes on or off in 2 minutes!
Granted, this is an extremely simple fabrication project, but, "One hour of time"... You must have one heck of a tooled up shop. I had to cut my sheetmetal with a bandsaw (but just recently upgraded to a Skilsaw cold saw blade...greatly improved cut and a real time saver for small stuff) . Geeze I'd love to see you in action. I'd learn a lot.
That's some hefty looking punched plate. How did you cut it? How is the front edge attached?
BTW earlier cold saw blades were rated at lower speeds. The Freud "Diablo" 7 1/4" Skilsaw blade is now rated to 5300rpm whereas the Skilsaw itself runs at 4400RPM. $39 at Home Depot. Rated for cutting steel up to 1/4" thick.