Okay, well speaking of warping from welding, Karl had welded up those big expansion joint parts and was concerned that the warping he was seeing might not be acceptable to the customer. The inside diameter is a 1/4 x like 4 inch plate rolled the easy way, and the flange is 1/4 inch x like 6 inch rolled the hard way with expansion relief slots laser cut around the perimeter. These two parts were welded in a 'T' section. The leg of the 'T' ended up pulling out of perpendicular by about 1/4 inch at the tip. Having no idea of which tolerances were critical to the end user, he put in a call to the customer to see if that was okay, but in the meantime it was full round house blows with the sledge end of a maul trying to beat them back into submission.

Thankfully, the customer replied back that the warping was not at all critical (even though everything on the drawing was specified to 2 decimal places), so that stopped pretty quickly (it was loud and laborious).
Since Karl was still using the hoist bay and most of the bench, I focused on the axle perches.
Welded up the alignment bushings.

Cut the other side down with the cut off wheel (uncut shown for comparison).

And here they are sanded flush.

Here's another shot of the fit with the spring alignment pin now that the bushing has been cut down flush.

The axle measurement from outside to outside of the brake mounting plate flanges was about 71 inches (measured in the middle, plus or minus 1/16 depending on if you measured on the top or bottom, due to camber). I settled on offsetting the spring and shackle hangers 1/2 inch inboard from the centerline of the frame rails, which makes the springs 61 inches ctr-to-ctr. Quick look to make sure I had the axle camber the right way around. Rough measured over 5 inches from each end and used the flap wheel to sand off the paint where the welds would go.
I scribed a line down the center of the perches and measured over 5-1/32 to the center of the perch.
I also checked it for square to the axle centerline using a quick square (no pic).
With the axle clamped down to the bench on the flats of the brake mounting flanges, I checked the perch for level.

And here it is with a nice heavy tack on each side.

Now 3 heavy tacks on each side.

And here it is welded down for good.

I had gotten a little ahead of myself, having forgotten that I wanted to sand the sharp corners and edges off of the perch before I welded them on, so I did this one after the fact with the flap wheel, and the other one on the Bader.

For the detailed side profile sketch that the computer model is based on I had used the dimensions from Dexter's website for the spring mounting hardware and short trailer leaf springs, and had assumed that I would need to go spring over axle to get the height I wanted. Then I decided to go with the longer Jeep leaf springs. Before I had modeled all of the actual spring hanger parts I had briefly considered putting spring perches on both the top and bottom of the axle. If there was a question or error and I wanted to switch from spring over or under to the other way around, it would already be set up. However I quickly dropped that idea after modeling the Rough Stuff parts and YJ springs and gaining confidence that spring under configuration would work out great.
Well immediately after finishing the above welds, that decision was quickly reversed...I had welded the perch on the top of the axle, not the bottom!!! DOH!

That 'quick look' I had made to confirm orientation of the axle and perch was just a tad hasty. I must have gotten mixed up on what was up and what was down due to working 'upside down'. The April fool was me.
Frustrated over the lost time, but not defeated, Karl and I made a lunch run combined with a trip back here to buy another pair of 3500 lb. perches.

Add another $12 and change to the tally.
Back at the shop I located and welded the second perch (on top).

Back to the lathe to make some more alignment bushings (the frustrating part is that if I ever do switch to spring over, the first set of bushings will have to be drilled out to clear the spring alignment pin nuts).
Turning

and drilling

Fit into the perches (note that I sanded the corners on these perches ahead of time).

Weld 'em.

Grind the top sides flush, weld them, too, and sand 'em smooth.

Same drill as before, clamp 'em, measure 'em, tack 'em, weld 'em.


Notice that the welds wrap around the ends so that there is virtually no opportunity for a crack or tear to start.
And a few minutes cleaning up after myself.

I will post a link
here, in a bit, of my first vintage camping equipment score, that I made on my way home.