I have a GATOR they all leak-a one piece tonneau "might not" leak but then you have to deal with the tailgate sides-I am on my third iteration of weatherstripping
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Same here and it stays very dry even after going through a carwash with the side jets spraying, in hindsight I should have went with a trifold that comes all the way off for full bed access and cleaningWell the tonneau cover cost me about a hundred bucks after using FordPass points. A cap is thousands of dollars.
These are not equivalent things.
I absolutely have! That’s the only cap out on the market that I’m interested in for its style and functionality. I’ve been in contact with the Smart Cap folks but they tell me they don’t have current active plans of bringing a Mav option to market (there just isn’t enough demand yet).Have you seen a Smartcap for the Mav yet? Last time I looked they didn’t have one for our application. I talked to their rep at Overland Expo last year and he could only say they will build one if the market allows, but that they didn’t have current plans.
They are the cat’s ass though.
I have same grooves on both sides where front and sides come together. But I don’t have that big groove on side in the bed trim. My cover only leaks at the front.I do believe I found the main culprit for a leak at the front is a pair of grooves on each side at front of bed: The on on the bed top moulding about 6 inches to the rear of the back glass, and the smaller one right below the glass where bed side and bed front meet. Filled mine with flexible silicone and it really helped. need to add a bit more, I think, to get it fully taken care of. For the one on the side about 6 inches back, I brought it out to where the level of the moulding changes so it looks smooth. Only had clear silicone so a put a bit of flat black paint with it to make it less noticeable.![]()
The black plastic piece on the top of your bed side is one piece???I have same grooves on both sides where front and sides come together. But I don’t have that big groove on side in the bed trim. My cover only leaks at the front.
My mistake, It does have those grooves up close to the cab where trim on side of cab overlaps the bed trim. I’d just never paid any attention to them as my TipTop cover appears to leak along front of the bed. So I maybe mistaken on where it leaks. It’s raining now so when it stops I’ll crawl up in bed and look really close at all those areas.The black plastic piece on the top of your bed side is one piece???
Ah, the old "get a van" line instead of a cap. Had a van, got rid of it. I suppose you've never been hunting, fishing, camping, mountain biking, skiing or boating. In the Maverick, stinky, muddy shit and coolers go under the cap in the bed. Passengers go in the passenger area.Tonneau all the way. I had a truck with a cap. It was big, heavy and difficult to remove so I never did. It severely limited the size of stuff you could put in the back and wasn't really waterproof enough to keep stuff inside dry. We have an old explorer with roughly the same amount of room and it's guaranteed to keep stuff inside dry.
A tonneau can be easily removed so you can put any size thing that fits in the bed. Just yesterday we moved a fairly large book case that would never have fit in the explorer or under the cap.
And just today we stacked the bed with as many bags of mulch as could fit. Stacking them under a cap would have been a complete pain in the butt and we couldn't have fit as many.
If you need space under cover, get a van.
Not saying there isn't a specific use case for a cap, just that it doesn't give you anywhere near the flexibility of a tonneau.Ah, the old "get a van" line instead of a cap. Had a van, got rid of it. I suppose you've never been hunting, fishing, camping, mountain biking, skiing or boating. In the Maverick, stinky, muddy shit and coolers go under the cap in the bed. Passengers go in the passenger area.
I also suppose you've never been in a roll-over accident with all your SUV/Minivan stuff flying around inside with you in the passenger area. In the Maverick, sharp and solid objects go in the bed, under the cap. Passengers ride safely in the passenger area.
I'll also wager to say my Maverick cap has at least 2x the cargo space as any mid-size SUV, easily. 3x a compact SUV. If I have to rent a trailer ($50/day) twice a year to haul something that's easily done. P.S.- My cap leaked water for about a month before I fixed it for good. All myths Busted!
As soon as Ford builds a Transit Connect sized van with the Maverick Tremor drivetrain.Tonneau all the way. I had a truck with a cap. It was big, heavy and difficult to remove so I never did. It severely limited the size of stuff you could put in the back and wasn't really waterproof enough to keep stuff inside dry. We have an old explorer with roughly the same amount of room and it's guaranteed to keep stuff inside dry.
A tonneau can be easily removed so you can put any size thing that fits in the bed. Just yesterday we moved a fairly large book case that would never have fit in the explorer or under the cap.
And just today we stacked the bed with as many bags of mulch as could fit. Stacking them under a cap would have been a complete pain in the butt and we couldn't have fit as many.
If you need space under cover, get a van.
I think it depends on how you want to use your truck. When I first got my 02 F250 with an 8’ bed I wanted to haul all my expensive offshore fishing equpiment safe and locked so I bought a fiberglass cap which worked great.Anyone have any thoughts?
I think the "high end tonneau" + elevate rack comes in a fair bit lower than $2500. My Sentry CT+ elevate+TS rails was under $1800 with RealTruck forum discounts. I would consider the Sentry CT a high end cover. Maybe not the most expensive, but it is comparable with the BAK X4S in quality.FordPass points are irrelevant. I used mine on other stuff. $2500 for a high end tonneau + elevated rack system vs. $3000-$3500 for the cap with rack. Getting close to equivalent in both function and price.