Hey all! This is my first post, so I apologize if this is improper or duplicative in some way.
I have a desire for the Terra at a high level, which I think ultimately serves creating the best vehicle. I see this idea as filling a hole in the market due to no vehicle specifically delivering on all of the associated requirements that are necessary to make this happen, and this new vehicle feels like an open opportunity to fill that gap.
The ultimate truck bed camper:
The popularity of lightweight, compact truck bed campers that are small enough to fit into a garage is surging (GFC camper, SuperPacific camper, etc). These units are compact enough to be left full-time on the vehicle with minimal affects on aerodynamic efficiency, while adding a massive amount of utility through also having a lockable truck cap for tools, and a camper with you at all times.
As a middle-class tech employee, living in an urban environment like downtown Denver with a single-vehicle lifestyle and a garage-- having a system where I can store a camper inside, and also depart at the drop of a hat to go work from the road in comfort is "van life" nirvana.
Use-case agnostic features that also perfectly serve this use case:
That's all folks-- happy to be here and very excited for the release of these trucks! Go Scout go!
I have a desire for the Terra at a high level, which I think ultimately serves creating the best vehicle. I see this idea as filling a hole in the market due to no vehicle specifically delivering on all of the associated requirements that are necessary to make this happen, and this new vehicle feels like an open opportunity to fill that gap.
The ultimate truck bed camper:
The popularity of lightweight, compact truck bed campers that are small enough to fit into a garage is surging (GFC camper, SuperPacific camper, etc). These units are compact enough to be left full-time on the vehicle with minimal affects on aerodynamic efficiency, while adding a massive amount of utility through also having a lockable truck cap for tools, and a camper with you at all times.
As a middle-class tech employee, living in an urban environment like downtown Denver with a single-vehicle lifestyle and a garage-- having a system where I can store a camper inside, and also depart at the drop of a hat to go work from the road in comfort is "van life" nirvana.
Use-case agnostic features that also perfectly serve this use case:
- > 5kw bed power. I know current target specs says 120/220v power which sounds great, but I just want to reiterate how important it is to be able to access the wealth of power that these EV's can output. Being able to cook with high powered induction appliances is hugely important, and it would be great to be able to power other things while that is happening (charging an auxiliary battery, etc.).
- Having the cab accessible in some fashion from the bed.
- Whether it's being able to roll the window down all the way so people can crawl through into the cab (no, you do NOT have to market it this way) or even have the back fold down in a similar fashion to the Silverado EV. This would allow you to get out of hairy situations in an emergency.
- More interestingly, this would also allow you to use the vehicle HVAC system for heating and cooling the small truck camper!
- HVAC feeding the bed: More intentionally, if you just had another HVAC duct going into the bed with an air-tight cover for when it's not in use.. This could allow people to keep their pets in the bed with a truck cap in a conditioned space, and also enable using it for camping with a truck camper shell.
- Keep the square shape of the bed! This design geometry is crucial for aftermarket camper shell attachment, since for manufacturing simplicity they are all square shaped.
- Air suspension: This is not a necessity in my mind, and I know this one is a bit controversial, but it would be great as an option. Here's why: The Rivian R1T in its lowest suspension setting with a GFC V2 truck camper comes in at like 79" tall, meaning it will just fit into my 80" tall garage (84" garage openings are average). Again, this caters to allowing this vehicle to wear a truck camper at all times for folks with average or even below average garage door openings (additional 4" could easily be eaten up by a ski rack, etc.).
That's all folks-- happy to be here and very excited for the release of these trucks! Go Scout go!
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