Gear Guide

DIESEL HEATERS
FOR THE TUNE M1

A diesel heater is what turns the M1 from a three-season camper into a year-round rig. How to choose, size, and install one, and what's actually working for M1 owners in cold weather.

TL;DR
  • Most popular size: 2kW unit is sufficient for the M1's small space
  • Diesel heaters are safer than propane: combustion is external, no CO risk inside
  • Fuel source: can tap the truck's diesel tank or run a separate small tank
  • Power draw: low, but factor into your battery sizing
  • Budget: VEVOR/HCALORY 2kW (~$80–$150) · Premium: Webasto Air Top 2000 STC (~$1,259–$2,381 from US authorized dealers)

Why Diesel vs. Other Heat Sources

A 2kW sealed forced-air heater is the standard heating solution for the Tune M1. The two most popular options are the Truma Varioheat (a propane/LPG unit available as a Tune factory install for ~$3,600–$4,000) and Chinese-made diesel heaters from VEVOR or HCALORY ($100–$200 for a DIY install). Both share the property that matters: combustion happens in a sealed chamber and exhaust vents outside the cabin — no CO risk inside, no combustion moisture added to interior air, and minimal battery draw. The Truma is included on this page despite running on propane because it behaves like a diesel forced-air heater for cabin air quality and condensation, which is what separates it from unvented Buddy-style propane heaters. Why these forced-air units dominate over other heat sources:

  • Safety: Diesel combustion happens externally. No open flame inside, no oxygen consumption, no CO risk from the heat source itself (unlike propane).
  • Fuel efficiency: A 2kW unit burns a fraction of a liter per hour. A small fuel supply lasts multiple nights.
  • Low power draw: After startup, diesel heaters draw minimal electricity, much less than an electric heater. Your battery handles it easily.
  • The units themselves are compact enough to mount under a sleeping platform or in a corner of the truck bed without eating into your living space.

The exception: if you already own propane gear and mostly camp in mild weather, propane works for occasional heat. Cold-weather regulars should start with diesel.

Sizing: How Many kW?

The M1's sleeping space is compact. You're heating a small volume of air, not a house. A 2kW unit is what most M1 owners run and it's more than sufficient for the M1's interior. Going larger adds weight and cost without meaningful benefit for this application.

The M1 warms up quickly, the small interior volume means a 2kW heater can bring the space from freezing to comfortable in 10–15 minutes. Most owners run it at 30–50% power for overnight heating once the space is up to temp. M1 owners have camped comfortably in single-digit °F temperatures with a 2kW heater, though at those extremes the heater runs at higher settings and fuel consumption increases. A Maxxair vent on low speed helps circulate the warm air evenly through the space.

Installation in the M1

The heater unit is typically mounted in the truck bed, often under the sleeping platform or at the foot of the sleeping area. Common installation approach:

  • Heater body: mount to the truck bed floor or a 80/20 T-track platform. Keep it accessible for maintenance.
  • Combustion air intake: route through the floor or side wall of the truck bed to outside air. The intake must be protected from water intrusion.
  • Exhaust outlet: route through the floor or side wall and position away from any openings where exhaust could re-enter. Point downward or sideways, never toward any opening in the camper.
  • Fuel line: run from your fuel tank (auxiliary or truck's diesel tank) to the heater's fuel pump. Chinese units include a fuel pump; premium units often do too.
  • Wiring: connect to your 12V house battery. Most units include a wiring harness. Use an inline fuse.
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Always ensure the exhaust outlet is routed completely outside the living space and positioned where exhaust gases cannot re-enter through any openings. Improper installation can create CO hazards.

Heater Ports: Clean Sidewall Pass-Through

One of the biggest quality-of-life upgrades for M1 diesel heater installs is a dedicated heater port, a purpose-built fitting that creates a clean, weatherproof opening through the M1's side wall for the combustion air intake and exhaust lines. Without one, owners typically route hoses through improvised holes, which can look rough and let in drafts.

Two products dominate this category in the M1 community:

Community Designed
AirPort Diesel Heater Port
Side wall mount Injection molded Field tested 1+ year
AirPort was designed by an M1 owner specifically for the platform, the product was tested for over a year before production samples were made available to the community. Injection molded (not 3D printed), with a clean aesthetic. Newer to market than Radica but growing in community adoption. The founder shared the product first with the M1 community specifically, which builds trust.
Strong community credibility, designed for the M1 by someone in the community. Worth checking if Radica is out of stock.
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Both heater port products require cutting a hole through the M1's sidewall. This is permanent and irreversible. Measure carefully and confirm your heater's hose diameter before ordering. Many owners report feeling nervous about the cut, but also report it went fine once they committed.

DIY pass-through (no dedicated port)

Some owners skip the dedicated port products and route hoses through a weatherproof grommet or a custom-cut hole sealed with Sikaflex or butyl tape. Results vary, it works, but the fit and finish is typically not as clean and the weatherproofing requires more care. If you're cost-sensitive or the above products are out of stock, this is viable, but the dedicated ports are popular for good reason.

Fuel Source Options

Diesel heaters can draw from two fuel sources:

  • Truck's diesel tank (diesel-engine trucks only): If you have a diesel truck, you can tap a T-fitting into the factory fuel line to supply the heater. This is convenient (you never need to refill a separate tank) but requires more involved installation. Note: the vast majority of M1 trucks are gasoline engines (Tacoma, Tundra, F-150, Ram 1500, Silverado all have common gas variants), so this applies to a minority of M1 owners.
  • Dedicated auxiliary fuel tank: The most common approach for gas-truck owners. A 1–2L fuel bottle (like a Rotopax 1.75gal fuel pack) filled with diesel works for a weekend trip. Some owners mount a small 1-gallon tank inside the camper in a ventilated box. Diesel is available at most gas stations. Easy to refill, easy to monitor.

Diesel heaters run on standard diesel (also compatible with heating oil and red diesel in most states). Some owners have used kerosene with success, though manufacturers typically recommend against it for warranty purposes.

Power Draw & Battery Impact

Diesel heaters have two power phases:

  • Startup: Brief high-draw period while the glow plug heats up, typically 10–15A for 30–60 seconds
  • Running: Very low draw, typically 10–30W (0.8–2.5A at 12V) while maintaining heat

For overnight use, a 100Ah LiFePO4 battery handles a diesel heater easily. An 8-hour night running the heater at medium setting draws roughly 10–20 Ah total, well within even a modest battery setup. The startup spike (10–15A for ~60 seconds) is brief and doesn't represent a meaningful load on any properly sized battery.

Community Picks

Premium Pick
Webasto Air Top 2000 STC
2kW ~4.4 lbs (unit) 0.07–0.26 L/hr Multi-control options
The Webasto Air Top 2000 STC (the current production version, replacing the older ST) is the standard for quality in diesel cabin heaters, used in commercial vehicles, RVs, and marine applications worldwide. Significantly more reliable than budget units, quieter in operation, and backed by a proper warranty and service network. US authorized-dealer pricing for the 12V kit currently runs ~$1,259–$2,381 depending on retailer and accessories — roughly 8–15× the cost of a VEVOR/HCALORY. At that gap, the calculus shifts: the Webasto is genuinely worth it for full-time or expedition users who depend on heat for safety, but for occasional cold-weather campers, two or three Chinese units (kept as backups) cost less than one Webasto. The factory Truma at ~$3,600–$4,000 installed is also worth a look if you want a sealed, vented, dealer-backed unit and don't want to do your own install.
Worth the premium for full-time or expedition cold-weather users. For occasional winter campers, the price gap to a Chinese unit is large enough that DIY-with-spares is a reasonable alternative.
~$1,259–$2,381
Check Price →
HCALORY 2kW Diesel Heater
2kW ~5.5 lbs (kit) 0.07–0.24 L/hr Bluetooth app
HCALORY is often cited as having slightly better documentation and more consistent QC than generic VEVOR units, a meaningful difference for first-time installers. The Bluetooth app control is a genuine convenience improvement over wired LCD controllers. Similar price range to VEVOR, similar core performance. A good alternative if VEVOR is out of stock or you want app control from the start.
Good budget alternative with better app control than the wired-LCD entry units.
~$100–$160
Check Price →

M1 Diesel Heater Questions

Common questions about heating the Tune M1 in cold weather.

Is a diesel heater safe in a truck camper?

Yes — when properly installed. Diesel heaters combust externally, meaning the flame, combustion air, and exhaust are all outside the living space. There's no CO risk from the heater itself in normal operation (unlike propane burners inside the cabin). The key is proper exhaust routing — the exhaust must exit completely outside with no chance of re-entry through windows or openings.

Can I use a diesel heater in a gasoline-engine truck?

Yes (diesel heaters run on their own fuel supply, completely independent of your truck's engine. Gas-engine truck owners (the majority of M1 owners) use a small dedicated fuel tank or bottle filled with diesel from any gas station. A 1.75-gallon Rotopax-style fuel pack is a common choice) it mounts cleanly, is easy to fill, and carries enough fuel for several nights. You absolutely do not need a diesel truck to run a diesel heater.

What's the coldest temperature an M1 diesel heater handles?

M1 owners have reported comfortable camping at single-digit °F with a properly installed 2kW diesel heater. The small interior volume heats quickly, and the heater maintains temperature efficiently once the space is up to temp. At extreme cold (below 0°F), the heater runs at higher settings and you'll want good sleeping bag insulation as a backup. At high altitude (8,000+ ft), some Chinese units can struggle to start due to lower oxygen levels. Premium units like Webasto handle altitude better.

What is a diesel heater port and do I need one?

A heater port is a purpose-built fitting that creates a clean, weatherproof opening through the M1's sidewall for the diesel heater's combustion air intake and exhaust lines. You don't need one (you can route hoses through an improvised grommet) but the dedicated port products (Radica, AirPort) create a much cleaner and more weatherproof install. Both require cutting a hole through the sidewall, which is permanent. If you're installing a diesel heater and want a clean result, budget for one of these products. Community discussion on heater ports is enormous. It's one of the most-engaged topics in the M1 owner group.

Do I need solar if I run a diesel heater?

Not necessarily. Diesel heaters have very low running power draw, a standard 100Ah LiFePO4 battery handles overnight heating easily. Whether you need solar depends more on your other power loads (fan, devices) than the heater itself. See the solar guide and battery guide for sizing guidance.

Stay Warm, Build Smart
ADD A HEATER TO YOUR
PAYLOAD BUDGET

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