Traveling a lot through Montana & Wyoming as well as I-10 between Junction & Ozona, TX at night tends to have one thinking about wildlife encounters,
so I already had a bumper/grill-guard design down on paper when a left front tire failure kicked me off TDC on the project about 10 yrs ago.
Picked up the material and completed the bumper while the body shop was making repairs to everything else the tire tore up. I used 3" sch 40 pipe for the bumper and 1-1/2" sch 40 for the grill guard. All the bends are std weld fittings and bumper tubes are connected and set up to use as an air pressure tank. B313 severe welding procedures throughout. Plate is all 3/16" diamond plate, and the skid plate is set to direct anything going under the bumper to continue below front axle. Open spaces between all the tubes is covered with 3/4" heavy expanded metal except for in front of the headlights. Mounting to frame is 1/2" plate using factory bolt holes and center of gravity ended up being directly over the mounting point to the frame. In total, about $200 worth of material at the time. Whole assembly ended up weighing close to 400# and set the front end down 3/8" when the hoist supporting the bumper was slacked off. But the front axle is still well under rated capacity as long as I'm careful with how the bed is loaded. No front-end problems in well over 125k miles since then. I used to worry that serious front end impact will likely buckle the frame, but I finally realized this impact was likely to bend the frame anyway. Have survived deer encounters unscathed @ 45 & 60 mph and it is nice to not have to risk an accident avoiding something that steps out in front of me. Have also collected the occasional tail light from folks backing into me in the parking lot at work. :-laf Before and after pictures:

