The brand is brewing a design for a slick truck topper that makes pickup utility smarter in more ways than one. White RAM 4x4 pickup truck rear with black trim and tinted rear window on a dirt road. As evidenced by the ever-controversial Cybertruck, the pickup utility of tomorrow stands to look nothing like what we know of it today. However, Tesla isn’t alone in its efforts to rethink the truck and its bed. From Ford’s origami-like rooftop tent to Nissan’s roll-away tailgate, automakers across the industry continue to bring innovation to the segment, and in more ways than one. In one of its configurations, Ram’s design forms an angle to improve aerodynamic efficiency. The latest promising concept to emerge comes from Ram. While the brand may have axed its all-electric Ramcharger, it nevertheless seems that it hasn’t given up on the idea of efficiency. Ram’s pop-top tonneau cover Well, at least if the latest FCA patent (20260116479) published with the USPTO is any indication. Surfaced by CarBuzz, it describes a slick tonneau cover design that can fold out to form an angled fastback configuration. However, it can also fold flat to act as a standard tonneau cover. Like the geometric Cybertruck and Ford’s teased UEV pickup, then, it adopts a sloped profile in the pursuit of improving aerodynamics and maximizing possible range. While Ram doesn’t make any concrete claims, it’s proven that even flat covers can help up your possible MPGs. Now, thanks to the cover’s hinged design, its potential isn’t limited to its wind-cheating abilities. On the contrary, as its modularity promises to be an arguably even bigger value add, should it ever make it to production. That’s because, in addition to deploying as a rearward wedge, Ram’s tonneau can also lift around all four corners to become a fully enclosed cargo box. In both added security and extra storage, the potential there speaks for itself. Folding legs on all four corners allow the cover to be deployed as a fully enclosed cargo box. When you consider that the whole setup packs away flat and that it mounts into a set of dedicated tracks without impact to available storage, the result is something that just begs for use. Work or play, the promise is real After all, as a truck topper, Ram’s patent can tackle a variety of situations. Whether you’re popping it for room or dropping it for improved range, you’re not constrained to a sole configuration as you would be with a fixed design. Whether for part-time work trucks or for a weekend-ready overlanding solution, modularity offers benefits across applications. In fleet applications especially, then, it poses the potential to add some critical versatility. Beyond enabling gas savings, it would allow operators to quickly change truck configurations to address the requirements of the job at hand. Of course, you don’t need much imagination to see Ram’s design working for overlanding accommodations. As it stands, it already promises a solution for weekend warriors who can’t live with a dedicated camper shell from Monday to Friday. Moreover, if an OEM is already envisioning something of this complexity, there’s no telling what the aftermarket would add. Forget rack-mounted awnings and rooftop tents, this fold-out cover may one day be the basis for fully pop-up mobile living accommodations. Put one of these puppies on a TRX, and it’d make for quite the expedition rig. A patent offers no guarantee that something like this will ever see the light of day. Still, it’s promising that Ram and other automakers continue to see the truck bed as, erm, a hotbed for development. About the Author: Gray is an associate editor at Gear Patrol, covering cars, motorcycles and anything else with wheels. When he’s not chasing the latest industry news, he’s probably wrenching on one of many projects. For better or worse, he believes classics make perfectly practical daily drivers. Want to stay up to date on the latest product news and releases? Add Gear Patrol as a preferred source to ensure our independent journalism makes it to the top of your Google search results. add as a preferred source on google