Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. News

New Rivian video showcases its electric trucks’ camping credentials

Add as a preferred source on Google
Cooking in the Wild

Rivian is far from the only startup developing high-end electric vehicles. But instead of a sports car or luxury sedan, Rivian decided to build a pickup truck and SUV with genuine off-road capability. What do you do with that kind of vehicle? You take it camping, of course.

Recommended Videos

A video released by Rivian shows the company’s R1T pickup truck being used for exactly that. It shows that the R1T has plenty of room for camping gear, including a bed-mounted tent. Rivian has also developed a portable camp kitchen that fits into the storage cubby built into the side of R1T’s bed. Sporting drawers for pots and pans, aswell as an electric range to cook on, the camp kitchen slides out of the side of the vehicle. It’s unclear if this accessory will be available when the R1T launches, however.

The R1T’s ample cargo space is due in part to its design. Rivian used a “skateboard” chassis that houses the battery pack, electric motors, and suspension, meaning none of those components intrude into the body. The R1T has a front trunk — like a Tesla — as well as a storage compartment where the transmission tunnel would normally be. Rivian also plans to sell the R1S, which will use the same chassis as the R1T, but with a seven-seat SUV body.

Rivian will offer the R1T with three battery-pack sizes: 180 kilowatt-hours, 135 kWh, and 105 kWh. The 180-kWh pack will offer the most range (400 miles, according to Rivian), but the 135-kWh pack will offer the quickest acceleration (0 to 60 mph in 3.0 seconds). All versions will have an electronically limited top speed of 125 mph. Rivian also claims a maximum towing capacity of 11,000 pounds, which is substantially more than the midsize trucks the R1T most closely resembles in size.

All of that capability won’t come cheap. The R1T has a base price of $69,000, and Rivian is taking $1,000 refundable deposits for the truck. The company plans to begin deliveries in late 2020, starting with the 180-kWh and 135 kWh- models. Rivian previously said the 105-kWh R1T will follow within 12 months of the start of production.

Electric-vehicle startup failures are numerous, but Rivian does have a few things going for it. The company has already secured a former Mitsubishi factory in Normal, Illinois, to build the R1T and R1S. It has also attracted the attention of some big players. Amazon will invest $700 million in Rivian, while Ford has confirmed a $500 million invest. Ford will also use Rivian’s “skateboard” chassis for one of its own electric vehicles.

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
Electric cars are getting more pocket-friendly globally, except for US buyers
The US EV market's 2025 decline wasn't about consumer disinterest. It was the predictable result of eliminating financial incentives.
Porsche Cayenne Coupe electric

In 2025, one in four cars sold anywhere in the world was electric. However, in the US, that figure is closer to one in ten, and it is not moving in the right direction. 

The falling EV prices globally have pushed sales to record levels. American buyers, on the other hand, are marching through 2026 with fewer incentives, higher prices, and a shrinking selection of affordable options. 

Read more
Lexus halts plans of an electric car based on the stunning LF-ZC concept and it’s such a bummer
Lexus finally designed a gorgeous EV and then sent it to timeout
LF-ZC concept

Toyota and Lexus may have just shelved one of the most exciting electric vehicle concepts shown in recent years. According to reports from Automotive News and Nikkei Asia, Toyota has halted development of the next-generation Lexus EV that was expected to be based on the futuristic LF-ZC concept.

For EV enthusiasts and Lexus fans, the news is particularly disappointing because the LF-ZC represented one of the clearest signs that Lexus was finally preparing to make a serious leap into the premium electric future.

Read more
Rivian thinks Apple CarPlay is already obsolete and AI is the reason why
Rivian’s AI push could change how you use cars in the future
Rivian R2 in Catalina Blue.

Rivian has once again defended its controversial decision to skip Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, but this time the company says the future of in-car technology is moving beyond smartphone mirroring altogether. According to Rivian’s software leadership, rapid advances in artificial intelligence could soon make the entire CarPlay debate irrelevant.

The comments come as Rivian continues expanding its own AI-powered vehicle software ecosystem instead of adopting Apple’s popular in-car platform. For years, the company has faced criticism from buyers who wanted CarPlay support, but Rivian now believes AI assistants will eventually replace many of the functions drivers currently rely on through their phones.

Read more