zzdcar
Home
/
Reviews
/
Culture
/
Everyone Shut Up I Just Re-Invented Trucks And SUVs
Everyone Shut Up I Just Re-Invented Trucks And SUVs-April 2024
2024-02-19 EST 22:12:43

Image for article titled Everyone Shut Up I Just Re-Invented Trucks And SUVs

How’s your social distancing and all that crap going? Great, right? Are you at the stage yet where your seclusion and increasingly weird diet has transformed you into a superhuman, capable of achievements never before dreamed possible? I think I may be there, friends. I say this not out of a desperate plea for attention and help, but because I had a vision. A vision of a new kind of truck/SUV. I call it the Flipback.

It’s certainly possible this basic idea has been proposed before, but my painstaking and exhaustive nearly 26-second Google search didn’t show anything close, so I’m going to boldly shove on ahead. If this somehow already exists, great, we all win.

The fundamental concept behind this is really quite simple, and the goal is to finally find a way to combine the utility of a pickup truck with the comfort and enclosed cargo protection of an SUV/crossover/wagon.

Traditionally, there’s been a number of solutions to this problem, the most common of which is the pickup truck camper shell. Camper shells are effective at converting trucks into sort-of SUVs/wagons by enclosing the cargo bed, but they’re a pain to take on and off, and when off they need a lot of room to store, suspended in a garage or on a stand of some kind, or just on the ground, even.

Other solutions like the or only partially address the issue with their folding midgates and seats. The Flipback design can incorporate the folding seats and midgate, but can provide the greater flexibility of the pickup truck camper shell option, without the installation and storage issues.

It’s all explained most easily in a simple animation:

See that? Essentially, a Flipback truck has an integrated camper shell that rotates 180 degrees to form the interior truck bed. Ideally, there would be a mechanism to automatically raise, rotate, and lower the shell/bed unit, but, really, a properly designed shell/bed could be built that could be removed, flipped, and replaced manually, and even sold as an aftermarket truck accessory.

Image for article titled Everyone Shut Up I Just Re-Invented Trucks And SUVs

Really, the idea is extraordinarily simple: just shape a camper shell so it can fit in a truck bed as a bedliner, and build it out of materials appropriate to both uses. Yes, the actual shape would need to accommodate wheel wells, but I think there could be ways to design this and still have it be effective, especially if such a system were designed from the start with the vehicle.

If you’re concerned about the windows getting damaged or the lack of refinement and comfort that such a solution would have, I have an idea for that, too, if you’ll forgive the quick sketch:

Image for article titled Everyone Shut Up I Just Re-Invented Trucks And SUVs

The shell’s inner ceiling would be made of a pair of panels with insulated, padded, headliner material on one side (maybe some dome/map lights as well?) that could be flipped to the sides, exposing a rugged bedliner side that would protect the windows and side trim of the inside of the shell. A similar panel would be provided for the rear window area, which would now be by the cab of the truck.

Under the two panels would be a ruggedized bedliner surface suitable for the truck bed.

I know my goofy model there shows a VW Vanagon with the Flipback system, but chock that up to my own stupid fetishes and know this could work for, really, any truck or SUV or even wagon design. If it has a cargo area that could work as an open bed or a covered wagon, this could work.

Image for article titled Everyone Shut Up I Just Re-Invented Trucks And SUVs

Unibody crossovers could use it in conjunction with fold-flat rear seats and folding midgates to go from family hauler SUV to pickup with ease. Body-on-frame trucks could use it to convert from exposed to enclosed cargo hauling needs, for cargo weather protection, normal camper shell use, passenger carrying options, or, if using a mechanized raised/lower/rotate assembly, could even be employed to keep oversized cargo contained or make a sort of double-decker load area.

Like this:

Image for article titled Everyone Shut Up I Just Re-Invented Trucks And SUVs

That’s just an added bonus for hardcore cargo use, right there.

I’ve also convinced myself that a mechanism like this really wouldn’t have to be any more complex than, say, any modern hardtop convertible system or even the Tesla Model X’s Falcon Doors—in fact, the mechanism should be substantially less complex, as it just needs to raise on one axis, rotate the shell, and return back down. Easy, right?

And, again, even if it is complex, this is the sort of thing that could be sold as a manually installable, flippable camper top-to-bedliner product.

Of course, I’d most love to see a full-implemented, mechanized version catch on, especially on something like a small wagon that could transform in to a Subaru Brat-like vehicle, and then back to a wagon.

Actually, Subaru, are you listening? This could be the next installment of your Brat/Baja legacy, if done right! This should be an option for Jeep Gladiators or the upcoming new Bronco!

Automakers, you know how to get ahold of me. Just please try to be patient, as I expect I’ll be taking many, many calls.

Man, this staying at home bullshit may just pay off, after all. I mean, aside from not spreading the Covid-19 virus. That’s important, too, I guess.

Comments
Welcome to zzdcar comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Culture
I Entered My Lifted Miata In A Real Off-Road Race, Here's What Happened
I Entered My Lifted Miata In A Real Off-Road Race, Here's What Happened
I have two automotive loves: The first is the Miata, the second is off-road racing. For a while I raced air-cooled Volkswagens in the deserts of California and Nevada and I was lucky enough to co-drive in a class 11 stock bug in the Baja 1000 a few years...
Apr 20, 2025
Toyota Is Moving A Prewar 700-Ton Press Machine Halfway Around The World
Toyota Is Moving A Prewar 700-Ton Press Machine Halfway Around The World
closed its São Bernardo Plant in November 2023, marking the end of its first overseas production facility. The closure caps off a period of continuous car production in São Paolo, , lasting over 60 years. The plant was home to a Komatsu 700-ton press that predates itself. And now...
Apr 20, 2025
Watch ABS Fail When MotorWeek Tests A 1997 Chevy S-10
Watch ABS Fail When MotorWeek Tests A 1997 Chevy S-10
MotorWeek’s is some of the on the internet. The long-running automotive news magazine has a treasure trove of tests after being on the air for over 40 years. Where else can you find detailed instrumented testing of long-forgotten cars like the or a ? MotorWeek’s recent Retro Review upload is...
Apr 20, 2025
Subaru Had It Right All Along
Subaru Had It Right All Along
When first came to the United States, it sold small funky cars that were decidedly un-American. As the company grew its own identity and became more established in the U.S., it became the first automaker to offer an all-wheel-drive passenger car in 1975. Subaru was also an early-adopter of...
Apr 20, 2025
I Can't Get Enough Of This YouTuber Who Builds Tiny, Fully Functional Scale-Model Cars
I Can't Get Enough Of This YouTuber Who Builds Tiny, Fully Functional Scale-Model Cars
I love tiny, of . I have a that is roughly half the size of a normal cat, and she’s perfect. I own a 2013 , which is like the miniature version of a normal-sized vehicle (at least here in Texas) — but beyond that, I also own a Hot...
Apr 20, 2025
2024 Kia EV9: What Do You Want To Know?
2024 Kia EV9: What Do You Want To Know?
At long last, we are about to get behind the wheel of for the first time. Sure, , and sure, , and sure , but hey — what can you do? Anyway, before we get behind the wheel of this three-row electric beast, we want to know what you...
Apr 20, 2025
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.zzdcar.com All Rights Reserved