I made my own hardtop out of sheet steel.
8g steel, extended to the wagon style rear end as I heard slant backs pretty much kill any cargo room or accessibility and leak like crazy.
I sold the tail gate and built a 50x34 inch rear door, i mounted a big tool box on the passenger side wheel well and put a door on the side.
Enclosed the entire thing with a mix of thinner 16g sheet metal and 8g sheet metal. Patched in everything, added my lights, made a few touch ups here and there.
Boom, it looks great and only ran me maybe $1,000 total.
Material was 700-800, sheet steel and quarter inch tubing and pipe.
A couple hundred bucks for bolts, glues, sealants, primers, paint, a few boxes of screws and a dozen pounds of welding rods.
Done and looks great, sealed, solid and heavy. Plus unlike the rest of the body my addition is bullet proof up to 7.62x39.
Honestly, I was shocked when the 5.56 failed to punch through. It could have been the flex, I am betting the 7.62 just plowed through with the triple weight of the 5.56.
Now, I know I violated the magna carta here by not going original, by not fully, completely, authentically restored by war carriage but, I know my skill sets and abilities and most important I know what I can afford and what I cant. I am not going to mortgage my house to buy a hardtop even if it was made of gold.
Aluminum was an option and once, I compared the two - steel and aluminum, thickness, price, weight, ability to work and fabricate. Steel won that race hands down.
I can weld, grind, cut, bend, drill, screw, glue, bolt, paint.
I dont tig weld, I dont braze aluminum or other non-f metals, I am not going to attach aluminum with only glue and half a dozen bolts.
I sure as **** am not going to spend $6,500 on a hardtop and who knows how much to ship it, plus other needed parts that hold up a project, match colors, and end up settling for something not exactly what I wanted or needed.
Plus, I am a big guy. 6'4 300lbs, I can stand on my roof and I have pitched a tent on top and actually grilled on my hardtop.
You cant beat that and aluminum would not work well with that approach speaking from experience and how slipper aluminum can be.
Tensile strength aside, steel can be welded easier for much cheaper, you can grind out mistakes and remove things that no longer work.
That is my two cents and I hope it helps a little.