M1 Compatibility
The mid-size Tune M1 fits the Rivian R1T 2022–present. The R1T has a 4.5-foot bed (54" with tailgate up), the shortest bed in the entire M1 compatibility list.
Despite the short bed, the M1 works because its design extends beyond the bed, the sleeping loft cantilevers over the cab, and the camper extends ~4" beyond the bed sides. The living and sleeping space isn't limited by the bed length.
Payload Capacity
The R1T has approximately 1,760 lbs of payload capacity. Unlike ICE trucks, the R1T doesn't have trims with wildly different payload ratings, the main variable is battery pack configuration.
| Configuration | Approx. Payload | M1 Build Verdict | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| R1T (Standard / Large Pack) | ~1,760 lbs | ✓ Strong | Payload is not the constraint on the R1T. Range is. |
| R1T (Max Pack) | ~1,700–1,760 lbs | ✓ Strong | Heavier battery may reduce payload slightly. Check your specific rating. |
Payload is not the R1T's limitation for M1 use, with 1,760 lbs, you have more headroom than most mid-size trucks. The real planning constraint is range.
Range Impact
This is the section that matters most for R1T owners. The M1 affects your range in two ways:
- Added weight (~400–500 lbs for a loaded M1 build), which increases energy consumption, especially on climbs and acceleration
- Aerodynamic drag: the M1's profile above the cab creates significant wind resistance, especially at highway speeds
Estimated range reduction: 15–30%
On an R1T with 300 miles of rated range, expect roughly 210–255 miles of real-world range with the M1 mounted. At 65+ mph highway speeds, the aero drag dominates and you'll be closer to the 30% reduction. At lower speeds on back roads, weight matters more and the reduction is closer to 15%.
These are estimates based on general EV truck camping data, your results will vary with speed, terrain, temperature, and driving style.
Plan conservatively. Use the Rivian trip planner with a manual efficiency reduction. If your normal Wh/mi is 450, plan for 550–600 Wh/mi with the M1. Build in a buffer. Running out of charge with a camper on a remote road is a much worse scenario than running low on gas.
EV Camping Advantages
The R1T brings some genuine advantages that ICE trucks don't have:
- Silent camp arrival. No engine noise. Pull into a campsite at night without waking anyone.
- Built-in 120V and 240V outlets. The R1T has outlets in the bed and gear tunnel. You can charge devices, run lights, or power small appliances directly from the truck without a separate camper battery.
- Gear tunnel. The R1T's pass-through gear tunnel (11.7 cubic feet) gives you weather-sealed storage that no ICE truck has. Perfect for camp chairs, kitchen gear, or items you want accessible without opening the camper.
- No fuel weight. An ICE truck carries 130–160 lbs of fuel that counts against payload. The R1T's battery is part of the curb weight, your payload budget doesn't include fuel.
- Flat bed floor. No wheel wells intruding into the bed space at the same height as ICE trucks.
- Camp Mode. The R1T can maintain climate in the cab overnight while keeping the vehicle level, useful as a backup heating option in cold weather.
EV Camping Challenges
- Range is your leash. You need charging infrastructure along your route. Remote BLM land and national forest dispersed camping often means long stretches without chargers. Plan your trips around charging availability.
- No engine heat for winter. ICE trucks pump out waste heat that some camper heater setups use. The R1T produces no engine heat, you need a dedicated camper heater (diesel heater is the community standard) for cold-weather camping.
- Charging time vs. fueling. A 15-minute gas stop becomes a 30–60+ minute charging stop. Factor this into trip planning, especially on multi-day drives to remote camping locations.
- Cold weather range loss. Cold batteries are less efficient. In winter, your range reduction compounds: M1 aero/weight loss + cold weather loss can total 40%+ from rated range.
- Using truck power for camper. Running high-draw items (AC, electric heater) from the R1T's outlets drains your driving range. Most owners run a separate LiFePO4 camper battery for daily camper use and reserve the truck outlets for emergency or low-draw use.
Realistic Payload Budget: R1T + M1
| Item | Weight | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 100Ah LiFePO4 battery | ~26 lbs | Separate camper battery recommended |
| Mattress (4" foam) | ~18 lbs | Custom cut to platform size |
| 7 gal fresh water | 58 lbs | 8.34 lbs/gal |
| Camper gear & accessories | ~50 lbs | Estimate, varies widely |
| Driver | ~175 lbs | Use actual weight |
| Passenger | ~150 lbs | If applicable |
| Cab gear (bags, food, etc.) | ~25 lbs | Easy to underestimate |
| Full fuel tank | 0 lbs | EV advantage. No fuel weight |
| Subtotal (everything except the M1) | ~502 lbs | What loads onto the truck before the camper |
| Tune M1 (base, mid-size) | ~400 lbs | Dry weight, no gear |
| Grand total (with M1) | ~902 lbs | What you're actually putting on the truck |
With 1,760 lbs of payload and no fuel weight, the R1T has roughly 858 lbs of headroom — the most of any truck on this site. Payload is not a concern on the R1T. Your planning energy should go entirely into range management.
R1T-Specific Tips
- Plan every trip around charging, not just distance. Conservative range estimates, 20% buffer past the trip planner, and knowing where your backup charger is before you leave. The M1's aero drag compounds at highway speeds — what looks fine on paper can get uncomfortable in the mountains at 70 mph.
- Run a separate camper battery. Every kWh pulled from the R1T's outlets is a kWh not available for driving. A 100Ah LiFePO4 handles lights, fans, and device charging for 1–2 nights independently. Reserve the truck outlets for occasional or emergency use.
- Diesel heater for winter. You don't have engine heat. A diesel heater (Webasto, Espar, or the more affordable Chinese clones) is the standard solution. See the heater guide and consider a heater port for a clean install.
- Use the gear tunnel. 11.7 cubic feet of sealed pass-through storage — camp chairs, kitchen gear, recovery equipment, all accessible without opening the camper. No other M1 truck has it.
- Speed costs range. The M1's aero drag grows with speed. Dropping from 70 to 55 mph can reclaim 10–15% of your range. On a camping trip, you're not in a rush anyway.
- Solar is especially valuable here. On an EV platform, solar on the M1 charges your camper battery independently of the truck — you camp longer without ever touching the truck's range budget. See the solar guide.