Roof Rack: I too don't really recommend a roof rack for all but the shortest of trips and the lightest of loads. The large ones that mount to the body tub and window frame are heavy, create oodles of drag, are expensive, and although the companies advertise that they easilly swing up and out of the way allowing you to drop the soft top, they're an extreme pain in the butt. Soft tops and roof racks do not go together. If, on the other hand, you must have some kind of rack on your hard top for carrying small loads, etc, you may want to consider a Thule or Yakima. I have a Thule one with the rain-gutter mounts. It easily clamps to the rain gutters over the front doors, and I drilled 2 holes each side over the rear windows of the hard top and mounted the "artificial rain gutters" which the rack clamps to back there. 2 years in Seattle and it never leaked. You can then throw up an aerodynamic roof rack carrier if you want your jeep to look like a subaru outback, or you can carry a ski rack, canoe, etc. Also, I have "artificial gutters" on my camping trailer and can move the rack back there on top of it to carry whatever I want to. The Thule/Yakima are a little expensive, but offer lots of versatility if that's what you're after.