Sponsored

Alan in Tempe

Well-Known Member
First Name
Alan
Joined
Feb 18, 2026
Threads
1
Messages
82
Reaction score
115
Location
Tempe, AZ
Vehicles
Mustang Mach-e First Edition
The one button feature to roll up all windows at once is another thing that is surprisingly nice. It’s the button above the windshield by the cabin light.
I think it is a bit sad that they could not figure out how to make those two switches (back window and all windows) move in the same direction as the windows. When pushing up on a window switch, the window should go up, and when pulling down on a switch, it should lower the window/s. Given that these switches are providing commands to the computer, rather than directly powering the window motors, this should be a software fix.
Sponsored

 

Jeremy3292

Well-Known Member
First Name
Jeremy
Joined
Apr 27, 2026
Threads
5
Messages
691
Reaction score
1,101
Location
South Carolina
Vehicles
R2
I think it is a bit sad that they could not figure out how to make those two switches (back window and all windows) move in the same direction as the windows. When pushing up on a window switch, the window should go up, and when pulling down on a switch, it should lower the window/s. Given that these switches are providing commands to the computer, rather than directly powering the window motors, this should be a software fix.
Regulations require it to be this way, RJ agrees with you.
 

emroch

Well-Known Member
First Name
Eric
Joined
Jun 9, 2026
Threads
2
Messages
110
Reaction score
233
Location
Austin, TX
Vehicles
Nissan Altima, Chevy Equinox
Occupation
HW Verification Engineer
Regulations require it to be this way, RJ agrees with you.
I didn't realize this was required by regulation. That's annoying. https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-49/part-571/section-571.118#p-571.118(S6.)(c)

I guess the point is that they don't want something to inadvertently bump the switch, causing the window(s) to close unintentionally and potentially cause injury (hence the sphere testing described in the previous paragraphs). It's much less likely something other than a finger will latch on and pull the switch away from the surface on accident. But bumping a switch on the ceiling feels equally difficult.

I wonder if the electrical polarity of that switch could be reversed with a little DIY?
 

emroch

Well-Known Member
First Name
Eric
Joined
Jun 9, 2026
Threads
2
Messages
110
Reaction score
233
Location
Austin, TX
Vehicles
Nissan Altima, Chevy Equinox
Occupation
HW Verification Engineer
If you think about it all the buttons go the same way, one is just upside down bc it’s on the ceiling. But “pull” is close and “push” is open on all windows.
Yeah, my mental model just pictures the button as representing the window, so my first instinct is to move the button in the direction I want the window to go (so on the ceiling, push up to roll windows up).
Its like the "natural scrolling" on trackpads - you can make an argument either way but some people will find one makes more sense than the other. It will just take some getting used to, but I'm sure it will become second nature rather quickly.
 

Sponsored

mkhuffman

Well-Known Member
First Name
Mike
Joined
Nov 9, 2020
Threads
14
Messages
3,024
Reaction score
3,438
Location
Virginia
Vehicles
2025 R1T Tri-Max, Jeep GC-L, VW Jetta
I didn't realize this was required by regulation. That's annoying. https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-49/part-571/section-571.118#p-571.118(S6.)(c)

I guess the point is that they don't want something to inadvertently bump the switch, causing the window(s) to close unintentionally and potentially cause injury (hence the sphere testing described in the previous paragraphs). It's much less likely something other than a finger will latch on and pull the switch away from the surface on accident. But bumping a switch on the ceiling feels equally difficult.

I wonder if the electrical polarity of that switch could be reversed with a little DIY?
We are from the government and we are here to help.
 

a9967

New Member
Joined
Jul 8, 2026
Threads
0
Messages
4
Reaction score
8
Location
US
Vehicles
Polestar 2, Hyundai Palisade
I wonder how hard it is to open them up and rewire? On most switches it'd be as simple as swapping a couple spade connectors... Depends on how sealed the module is, I suppose.
 
OP
OP
Budman

Budman

Well-Known Member
First Name
Rick
Joined
Oct 22, 2021
Threads
60
Messages
853
Reaction score
2,925
Location
Minnesota
Vehicles
Honda CRV
Clubs
 
Short update on my R2 experience. 900 miles on the clock and all is well except for a pesky large screw that found it's way into a tire in a non-reparable zone.....

I was out mountain biking at a trailhead 15 miles off of pavement on some rough forest service roads. Returned from my ride and a low pressure warning was on. I drove back to my cabin while monitoring the pressure which was loosing air slowly (nominal pressure is 42, I got back to my place at 30 psi). Inspected the tire and found the screw. No R2 tires in stock at the local repair shop (I have the 21" but because of the load rating no 20" either). TireRack is sending a tire to Hayward, WI but won't arrive until Wednesday. All tires, 20" and 21" was the same delivery date so having the 21" unicorn tire wasn't really an extra delay in this case.

Other than that all is solid. Vampire drain continues to show much less drain than the R1T. Had to do one soft reset of the software (tilt both haptic wheels outward and hold for a few seconds). I think it happened when I tried to increase the charge limit while the vehicle was still plugged in but had completed a charge to a lower limit. It would not restart charging and would reset the limit back to the previous setting. Then I realized I did not have a key or phone with me so it would not initiate the charge. I monkeyed around with it a lot without the key and I think that buggered up the software a bit. I did a soft reset with a key present and all is fine.
 
Last edited:

Qamera

Member
First Name
Michael
Joined
Jul 6, 2026
Threads
0
Messages
7
Reaction score
4
Location
Seattle
Vehicles
R3
Occupation
Designer
We picked up our R2 on Monday the 29 from the Minneapolis service center.

https://www.rivianforums.com/forum/...orning-june-29-so-far-so-good-vin-1588.60782/
tempImageRSgUhN.webp


We now have 263 miles on it including the 165 mile home-to-cabin trip we do frequently for which I also have extensive R1T gen 1 and gen 2 efficiency data for.

A lot to cover here. I'll try to be brief and compartmentalized.

TLDR: It's an awesome vehicle. Very impressed and happy so far. Lives up to all the claims and hype.


DELIVERY EXPERIENCE: This is our 3rd Rivan delivery and this one was just so-so. Delivery specialized was 15 minutes late then rushed a bit through our process as he had another delivery right after. These guys absolutely need to be smart phone specialists. Had some issues as we now have 2 Rivian and a shared Apple account between my wife and I. He had to some on the fly juggling but it all worked out.

FIT AND FINISH: I look hard, harder than I normally would, and cannot find any problems. I like the door handles much better than R1 because these (so far) don't have the squeak the R1's seem to have. The doors close and open better than R1.

R2 SOFTWARE MATURITY: We have 3 years of Rivian software experience so we know our way around it. R2 is a bit different than R1 so there is a bit of a learning curve. I poked around a lot in the software and have not identified any bugs or shortcoimings. Looking forward to the soon to be added pet mode though!

RIDE AND COMFORT: Quite good. Quiet and smooth. No wind noise. Seats are similar to R1 but not quite as comfortable. I was squirming a bit on our cabin trip this morning. Highway speed tracking was good, no tire balance issues or lane drift. Steering wheel alignment was good. No suspension rattles or creeks like R1.

CHARGING: At home no issues with a Grizzl-e charger and the Rivian Gear shop J-1772 to NACS converter. No fast charging yet.

HAPTIC WHEELS: Do basically the same functions as the 2-button 1-wheel setup on R1 but with one wheel. Nice but not revolutionary. As many have noted from test drives it seems hard to do a pull or push without a rotation but that does not seem to matter, the rotation is usually ignored. Seem tighter with a better feel than the test drive vehicle.

LIFT GATE AND FRUNK BUTTONS: Many (including us) experienced issues at first. But once we got the technique they work great. Put your finger on the button, give a quick press, remove finger. Do not let your finger linger, it won't do anything if you finger is still pushing the button.

R1 vs R2 SIZE. A few photo of the 2 vehicles with the back edges lined up.

tempImage50hJLH.webp


tempImagePfUfJv.webp


tempImageKcgIz8.webp



R1T vs R2 FRUNK SIZE: Smaller than R1T for sure but I can still get my golf bag in there but I have to take my driver out and lay it atop the bag.

tempImageU7QGSa.webp



R2 Below
tempImagej4Js2i.webp




R2 CARGO SIZE: A true strength of this vehicle. Very spacious. I can get my large size frame mountain bike inside without removing a wheel.

tempImage79Mncy.webp


tempImagexcaj4A.webp



CARGO AREA PROTECTION. I custom cut a piece of roofing membrane material to protect the floor. Cut slits to accommodate the 60/40 split so we can put a dog hammock on the 60 portion of the seating.

tempImagepsZFTD.webp


tempImageamgm2K.webp




VAMPIRE DRAIN: Many, many threads on this forum about R1 vampire battery drain while parked. For 2 nights I left both our R1T and R2 unplugged in the garage over night with about 70% on the batteries. Using the "energy monitor" function on the software and looking at the "8 hour usage" screen I observed much less drain on the R2. The R1T had 0.9kwh and 0.8kwh those 2 nights. The R2 was 0.0 and 0.2 kwh. Encouraging.

tempImageiT3iyD.webp




EFFICENCY AND RANGE: Saved this for last as it takes the most explanation.

The short version; R2 is very efficiency and I achieved close to the Rivian stated range figures on our home-to-cabin run much as I did with the Gen 1 and Gen 2 R1Ts

The long version: We travel between our Minneapolis area home and our Hayward, WI area cabin very frequently, always taking the same route. I've recorded the efficiency reported by the vehicle many times. Today with the R2 is the 100th entry into the database so I have a very comprehensive dataset. Multiple vehicles, multiple configurations (bike racks, different tires, etc) across a temperature range from -10 to 90 deg F.

The route is about 40% interstate highway and 60% urban freeway and rural 55mph roads with multiple small towns to travel through. The trip is 165 miles and my average speed is around 54 mph. On this route I've basically achieved the Rivian/EPA stated range figures during the summer at temps around 75F.

My criteria for data recording. I only record the trip into the database if the wind is less than 10 mph, there is less than a 10deg temperature swing during the trip and if there is no abnormal traffic or construction delays. Many trips have not been included because of this criteria. In the winter I never intentionally precondition the battery nor pre-warm the cabin of the vehicle. The vehicle is in a garage hooked to a 40 amp Level 2 charger where a charging session would have been completed anywhere from 0 to 8 hour before departure.


EFFICIENCY GRAPH: Efficiency data including; R1T Gen 2 dual motor max pack with 3 different tires. A Volvo XC40 recharge which is the vehicle we traded in for this Rivian R2.

The R2 is the green data point. It is impressively efficient, better than the much smaller Volvo XC40. The red dots are the Michelin Defender tires I recently installed on my R1T. In retrospect I wish I had stayed the Pirelli all seasons but that's a story for another thread.

R1T efficiency vs temp.webp



RANGE GRAPH: Assuming usable battery capacities of 141 kWh for the Gen 2 R1T, 78 kWh for the XC40 and 89 kWh for the R2 the full pack range figures are shown in the graph below. I get very close to the advertised range on this route we drive.

I feel I must make this disclaimer as somebody with chime in and ask questions or disagree: This is NOT an estimate of a highway range test, I do not claim and Rivian does not claim you will achieve the EPA range in highway driving. The EPA test is a mix if city and highway driving that just so happens to align well with this route I drive.

R1T range vs temp.webp



ANYTHING I WOULD LIKE TO SEE DIFFERENT OR ADDED TO THE R2: Cargo tie downs in the back cargo area....


ONE MORE THING. BOUNUS TOPIC ON LIFTING WITH A FLOOR JACK. A few weeks ago on this forum there was a thread about the jack points on the R2 and worries it was difficult to use, required special jack pucks and was downright unsafe. At the time I thought the whole thread was a nothing burger. I tried out my Husky floor jack this morning and yes, it was a big nothing burger. There is a nice rubber pad on the bottom of the vehicle frame. It is isolated enough and sticks out enough I could engage my floor jack with no issues. No jack puck required.

tempImage0aIwZ3.webp


tempImageCa9D9W.webp


tempImagef8EBpj.webp
We picked up our R2 on Monday the 29 from the Minneapolis service center.

https://www.rivianforums.com/forum/...orning-june-29-so-far-so-good-vin-1588.60782/
tempImageRSgUhN.webp


We now have 263 miles on it including the 165 mile home-to-cabin trip we do frequently for which I also have extensive R1T gen 1 and gen 2 efficiency data for.

A lot to cover here. I'll try to be brief and compartmentalized.

TLDR: It's an awesome vehicle. Very impressed and happy so far. Lives up to all the claims and hype.


DELIVERY EXPERIENCE: This is our 3rd Rivan delivery and this one was just so-so. Delivery specialized was 15 minutes late then rushed a bit through our process as he had another delivery right after. These guys absolutely need to be smart phone specialists. Had some issues as we now have 2 Rivian and a shared Apple account between my wife and I. He had to some on the fly juggling but it all worked out.

FIT AND FINISH: I look hard, harder than I normally would, and cannot find any problems. I like the door handles much better than R1 because these (so far) don't have the squeak the R1's seem to have. The doors close and open better than R1.

R2 SOFTWARE MATURITY: We have 3 years of Rivian software experience so we know our way around it. R2 is a bit different than R1 so there is a bit of a learning curve. I poked around a lot in the software and have not identified any bugs or shortcoimings. Looking forward to the soon to be added pet mode though!

RIDE AND COMFORT: Quite good. Quiet and smooth. No wind noise. Seats are similar to R1 but not quite as comfortable. I was squirming a bit on our cabin trip this morning. Highway speed tracking was good, no tire balance issues or lane drift. Steering wheel alignment was good. No suspension rattles or creeks like R1.

CHARGING: At home no issues with a Grizzl-e charger and the Rivian Gear shop J-1772 to NACS converter. No fast charging yet.

HAPTIC WHEELS: Do basically the same functions as the 2-button 1-wheel setup on R1 but with one wheel. Nice but not revolutionary. As many have noted from test drives it seems hard to do a pull or push without a rotation but that does not seem to matter, the rotation is usually ignored. Seem tighter with a better feel than the test drive vehicle.

LIFT GATE AND FRUNK BUTTONS: Many (including us) experienced issues at first. But once we got the technique they work great. Put your finger on the button, give a quick press, remove finger. Do not let your finger linger, it won't do anything if you finger is still pushing the button.

R1 vs R2 SIZE. A few photo of the 2 vehicles with the back edges lined up.

tempImage50hJLH.webp


tempImagePfUfJv.webp


tempImageKcgIz8.webp



R1T vs R2 FRUNK SIZE: Smaller than R1T for sure but I can still get my golf bag in there but I have to take my driver out and lay it atop the bag.

tempImageU7QGSa.webp



R2 Below
tempImagej4Js2i.webp




R2 CARGO SIZE: A true strength of this vehicle. Very spacious. I can get my large size frame mountain bike inside without removing a wheel.

tempImage79Mncy.webp


tempImagexcaj4A.webp



CARGO AREA PROTECTION. I custom cut a piece of roofing membrane material to protect the floor. Cut slits to accommodate the 60/40 split so we can put a dog hammock on the 60 portion of the seating.

tempImagepsZFTD.webp


tempImageamgm2K.webp




VAMPIRE DRAIN: Many, many threads on this forum about R1 vampire battery drain while parked. For 2 nights I left both our R1T and R2 unplugged in the garage over night with about 70% on the batteries. Using the "energy monitor" function on the software and looking at the "8 hour usage" screen I observed much less drain on the R2. The R1T had 0.9kwh and 0.8kwh those 2 nights. The R2 was 0.0 and 0.2 kwh. Encouraging.

tempImageiT3iyD.webp




EFFICENCY AND RANGE: Saved this for last as it takes the most explanation.

The short version; R2 is very efficiency and I achieved close to the Rivian stated range figures on our home-to-cabin run much as I did with the Gen 1 and Gen 2 R1Ts

The long version: We travel between our Minneapolis area home and our Hayward, WI area cabin very frequently, always taking the same route. I've recorded the efficiency reported by the vehicle many times. Today with the R2 is the 100th entry into the database so I have a very comprehensive dataset. Multiple vehicles, multiple configurations (bike racks, different tires, etc) across a temperature range from -10 to 90 deg F.

The route is about 40% interstate highway and 60% urban freeway and rural 55mph roads with multiple small towns to travel through. The trip is 165 miles and my average speed is around 54 mph. On this route I've basically achieved the Rivian/EPA stated range figures during the summer at temps around 75F.

My criteria for data recording. I only record the trip into the database if the wind is less than 10 mph, there is less than a 10deg temperature swing during the trip and if there is no abnormal traffic or construction delays. Many trips have not been included because of this criteria. In the winter I never intentionally precondition the battery nor pre-warm the cabin of the vehicle. The vehicle is in a garage hooked to a 40 amp Level 2 charger where a charging session would have been completed anywhere from 0 to 8 hour before departure.


EFFICIENCY GRAPH: Efficiency data including; R1T Gen 2 dual motor max pack with 3 different tires. A Volvo XC40 recharge which is the vehicle we traded in for this Rivian R2.

The R2 is the green data point. It is impressively efficient, better than the much smaller Volvo XC40. The red dots are the Michelin Defender tires I recently installed on my R1T. In retrospect I wish I had stayed the Pirelli all seasons but that's a story for another thread.

R1T efficiency vs temp.webp



RANGE GRAPH: Assuming usable battery capacities of 141 kWh for the Gen 2 R1T, 78 kWh for the XC40 and 89 kWh for the R2 the full pack range figures are shown in the graph below. I get very close to the advertised range on this route we drive.

I feel I must make this disclaimer as somebody with chime in and ask questions or disagree: This is NOT an estimate of a highway range test, I do not claim and Rivian does not claim you will achieve the EPA range in highway driving. The EPA test is a mix if city and highway driving that just so happens to align well with this route I drive.

R1T range vs temp.webp



ANYTHING I WOULD LIKE TO SEE DIFFERENT OR ADDED TO THE R2: Cargo tie downs in the back cargo area....


ONE MORE THING. BOUNUS TOPIC ON LIFTING WITH A FLOOR JACK. A few weeks ago on this forum there was a thread about the jack points on the R2 and worries it was difficult to use, required special jack pucks and was downright unsafe. At the time I thought the whole thread was a nothing burger. I tried out my Husky floor jack this morning and yes, it was a big nothing burger. There is a nice rubber pad on the bottom of the vehicle frame. It is isolated enough and sticks out enough I could engage my floor jack with no issues. No jack puck required.

tempImage0aIwZ3.webp


tempImageCa9D9W.webp


tempImagef8EBpj.webp
We picked up our R2 on Monday the 29 from the Minneapolis service center.

https://www.rivianforums.com/forum/...orning-june-29-so-far-so-good-vin-1588.60782/
tempImageRSgUhN.webp


We now have 263 miles on it including the 165 mile home-to-cabin trip we do frequently for which I also have extensive R1T gen 1 and gen 2 efficiency data for.

A lot to cover here. I'll try to be brief and compartmentalized.

TLDR: It's an awesome vehicle. Very impressed and happy so far. Lives up to all the claims and hype.


DELIVERY EXPERIENCE: This is our 3rd Rivan delivery and this one was just so-so. Delivery specialized was 15 minutes late then rushed a bit through our process as he had another delivery right after. These guys absolutely need to be smart phone specialists. Had some issues as we now have 2 Rivian and a shared Apple account between my wife and I. He had to some on the fly juggling but it all worked out.

FIT AND FINISH: I look hard, harder than I normally would, and cannot find any problems. I like the door handles much better than R1 because these (so far) don't have the squeak the R1's seem to have. The doors close and open better than R1.

R2 SOFTWARE MATURITY: We have 3 years of Rivian software experience so we know our way around it. R2 is a bit different than R1 so there is a bit of a learning curve. I poked around a lot in the software and have not identified any bugs or shortcoimings. Looking forward to the soon to be added pet mode though!

RIDE AND COMFORT: Quite good. Quiet and smooth. No wind noise. Seats are similar to R1 but not quite as comfortable. I was squirming a bit on our cabin trip this morning. Highway speed tracking was good, no tire balance issues or lane drift. Steering wheel alignment was good. No suspension rattles or creeks like R1.

CHARGING: At home no issues with a Grizzl-e charger and the Rivian Gear shop J-1772 to NACS converter. No fast charging yet.

HAPTIC WHEELS: Do basically the same functions as the 2-button 1-wheel setup on R1 but with one wheel. Nice but not revolutionary. As many have noted from test drives it seems hard to do a pull or push without a rotation but that does not seem to matter, the rotation is usually ignored. Seem tighter with a better feel than the test drive vehicle.

LIFT GATE AND FRUNK BUTTONS: Many (including us) experienced issues at first. But once we got the technique they work great. Put your finger on the button, give a quick press, remove finger. Do not let your finger linger, it won't do anything if you finger is still pushing the button.

R1 vs R2 SIZE. A few photo of the 2 vehicles with the back edges lined up.

tempImage50hJLH.webp


tempImagePfUfJv.webp


tempImageKcgIz8.webp



R1T vs R2 FRUNK SIZE: Smaller than R1T for sure but I can still get my golf bag in there but I have to take my driver out and lay it atop the bag.

tempImageU7QGSa.webp



R2 Below
tempImagej4Js2i.webp




R2 CARGO SIZE: A true strength of this vehicle. Very spacious. I can get my large size frame mountain bike inside without removing a wheel.

tempImage79Mncy.webp


tempImagexcaj4A.webp



CARGO AREA PROTECTION. I custom cut a piece of roofing membrane material to protect the floor. Cut slits to accommodate the 60/40 split so we can put a dog hammock on the 60 portion of the seating.

tempImagepsZFTD.webp


tempImageamgm2K.webp




VAMPIRE DRAIN: Many, many threads on this forum about R1 vampire battery drain while parked. For 2 nights I left both our R1T and R2 unplugged in the garage over night with about 70% on the batteries. Using the "energy monitor" function on the software and looking at the "8 hour usage" screen I observed much less drain on the R2. The R1T had 0.9kwh and 0.8kwh those 2 nights. The R2 was 0.0 and 0.2 kwh. Encouraging.

tempImageiT3iyD.webp




EFFICENCY AND RANGE: Saved this for last as it takes the most explanation.

The short version; R2 is very efficiency and I achieved close to the Rivian stated range figures on our home-to-cabin run much as I did with the Gen 1 and Gen 2 R1Ts

The long version: We travel between our Minneapolis area home and our Hayward, WI area cabin very frequently, always taking the same route. I've recorded the efficiency reported by the vehicle many times. Today with the R2 is the 100th entry into the database so I have a very comprehensive dataset. Multiple vehicles, multiple configurations (bike racks, different tires, etc) across a temperature range from -10 to 90 deg F.

The route is about 40% interstate highway and 60% urban freeway and rural 55mph roads with multiple small towns to travel through. The trip is 165 miles and my average speed is around 54 mph. On this route I've basically achieved the Rivian/EPA stated range figures during the summer at temps around 75F.

My criteria for data recording. I only record the trip into the database if the wind is less than 10 mph, there is less than a 10deg temperature swing during the trip and if there is no abnormal traffic or construction delays. Many trips have not been included because of this criteria. In the winter I never intentionally precondition the battery nor pre-warm the cabin of the vehicle. The vehicle is in a garage hooked to a 40 amp Level 2 charger where a charging session would have been completed anywhere from 0 to 8 hour before departure.


EFFICIENCY GRAPH: Efficiency data including; R1T Gen 2 dual motor max pack with 3 different tires. A Volvo XC40 recharge which is the vehicle we traded in for this Rivian R2.

The R2 is the green data point. It is impressively efficient, better than the much smaller Volvo XC40. The red dots are the Michelin Defender tires I recently installed on my R1T. In retrospect I wish I had stayed the Pirelli all seasons but that's a story for another thread.

R1T efficiency vs temp.webp



RANGE GRAPH: Assuming usable battery capacities of 141 kWh for the Gen 2 R1T, 78 kWh for the XC40 and 89 kWh for the R2 the full pack range figures are shown in the graph below. I get very close to the advertised range on this route we drive.

I feel I must make this disclaimer as somebody with chime in and ask questions or disagree: This is NOT an estimate of a highway range test, I do not claim and Rivian does not claim you will achieve the EPA range in highway driving. The EPA test is a mix if city and highway driving that just so happens to align well with this route I drive.

R1T range vs temp.webp



ANYTHING I WOULD LIKE TO SEE DIFFERENT OR ADDED TO THE R2: Cargo tie downs in the back cargo area....


ONE MORE THING. BOUNUS TOPIC ON LIFTING WITH A FLOOR JACK. A few weeks ago on this forum there was a thread about the jack points on the R2 and worries it was difficult to use, required special jack pucks and was downright unsafe. At the time I thought the whole thread was a nothing burger. I tried out my Husky floor jack this morning and yes, it was a big nothing burger. There is a nice rubber pad on the bottom of the vehicle frame. It is isolated enough and sticks out enough I could engage my floor jack with no issues. No jack puck required.

tempImage0aIwZ3.webp


tempImageCa9D9W.webp


tempImagef8EBpj.webp
The roofing membrane material is a great idea thanks. As a layman, could you recommend a specific material to use? And also the dimension you used for cutting it? Don't quite your day job yet but this is really good stuff. Thanks agin.
 
OP
OP
Budman

Budman

Well-Known Member
First Name
Rick
Joined
Oct 22, 2021
Threads
60
Messages
853
Reaction score
2,925
Location
Minnesota
Vehicles
Honda CRV
Clubs
 
The roofing membrane material is a great idea thanks. As a layman, could you recommend a specific material to use? And also the dimension you used for cutting it? Don't quite your day job yet but this is really good stuff. Thanks agin.
I got this product at Menard's but HomeDepot and Lowes have similar. It's very easy to cut with utility knife and scissors. I took some dimensions and marked the membrane with chalk then used a long metal yard stick to cut straight lines. Cut it as needed to serve your needs. This material comes in large quantities so I made liners for all my vehicles plus a liner for our dog hammocks so she can't scratch through the hammock to the seat below. You will still have a lot left over, share with friends and family :).

Rivian R1T R1S R2 Three Day Ownership Review.  Comparison to R1T.  Efficiency and Range data! tempImagepZKWvf
Sponsored

 
 








Top