Some good advice above. I'd recommend passenger mount if no RTT concerns. Rear mount I think is best but you're limited to size based on vehicle esthetic.
I've fiddled with several awnings on the Land Cruiser and we've gone non-fixed awning.
Another Shot underneath the "awning"
That is
really slick,
@RobRed; simple, effective, and good looking to boot. I like the way you do your gear, inside and out, and have watched your vids on ipad and radio mounts, etc. Clean work.
Doesn't appear to be, but have you had any probs with grommets pulling out on your tarp like others have expressed in the REI review comments?
Another awning, very similar to RobRed's, that I picked up last month to experiment with as far as flexibility and diff arrangements is the Roadhouse Tarp from Slumberjack. It goes from around $110.00 on
Amazon to $120 on the
Slumberjack site, and comes with large tarp, poles, line, and stakes.
A pic from their site, as I haven't had it out yet (their promo vid at the bottom of this post):
Like RobRed's, it can be configured a few different ways and can be set up off the side, or rear, or be free-standing, depending on need. I first saw it on a bushcraft site where the guy had it configured completely different than the three ways shown on Slumberjack. Looked good.
Another advantage of a tarp like RobRed's or the Roadhouse tarp, and most single side-attached awnings for that matter, is that you can lower the poles on the outside edge and have your awning slope way down if you need for greater shading or to block more wind, or even eliminate the poles and stake the outside edge to the ground.
Can't do that with the awnings that fold out on arms like mine, though I do have full sides now I can velcro to my awnings edge that I can hang straight down or stretch out like these.
Movable tarp awnings like Rob's design are certainly more flexible than a permanently attached awning, if that is something you need to consider,
@northern nomad .