Man, that is really cool looking, but it is going to be a TON of work! I call "no way" on getting it done, today, unless you borrow a plasma and have a professional grade welder with 100% duty cycle at 19V. With as hot as it is, even a MM211 like I used to have is only ~20% duty cycle at 19V, and you will want to, of course, seam weld it all, inside and out. Plus, there's a ton of inside radii on the outside there, that are a P-I-T-A-! to blend and make look right. The payoff is that it will look really fachin' cool, but that's a TON of work!
The "H" under the winch and the 1" lip at the rear, like we talked about, are definitely making that 3/16" winch plate strong enough!
The only things I'd add is where you've got around the sides of the frame boxed like we talked about, I'd also go all the way across the bottom. I know that makes you hack on and re-weld your radiator skid a bit, but it'll make the bottom of the bumper stronger, and I watched Regulator smack that front, bottom corner HARD on a rock, and his just deformed the corner of the weld a little bit, and didn't bend anything. The other thing would be a 1/2" reaward flange on the whole fairlead mount, so it doesn't flex as much.
I don't mean for this to sound like it's going to sound, but I'm not sure how much finish grinding/blending you've done. The outside seam blending can be the difference between a professional job and a hack-looking "I made this at home" job. The secret to it is holding the grinder at the angle of the first side, and grinding the weld down flush, then holding it at the angle of the joining piece, and grinding that side down flush. This will leave you with sort of an uneven, pointed ridge, in the middle. You then take the grinder back and forth across the length of the ridge, at different angles with each sweep, until you have the radius that you want. Do the rough grinding with a grinding wheel, then finish it off and blend it all with a flap disk sanding wheel. 60-grit works well. They're $7-$9 locally, or you can get them from Roark Supply, by putting in the code "GRIT" at checkout, for $1.89 each (
http://www.roarksupply.com/4-1-2-Zircon ... pdiscs.htm). That's where I get mine, and they work as well and last as long or longer than the $8 ones that you get from Lowe's.
That bumper will use at LEAST 3-4 flap disks, and probably 8-9 regular aluminum oxide grinding wheels, or 1-2 of the Norzon Plus zirconia grinding wheels I use (but the Zirconia wheels cut like 2-3x as fast, so you have to be careful with them). Roark has the Norton Gemini wheels for $1.97 each, which is a steal, and they're a good, mid-grade wheel. They don't cut as fast as the Norzon Plus or last as long, but they are SOOO much better in both life and cutting speed than the $2 wheels you get at the local TSC/Menards. Time and number of wheels depends on your welds, and how much grinding you need to do. I don't even want to imagine how many cutoff wheels you're going to use cutting it all up, but you probably won't be far off purchasing the $279 plasma that Donny linked (though the US made cutoff wheels are $1.69 at Roark Supply)...
Flap disc:
Mike