Pickup trucks are great…most of the time. Today’s modern crop of crew-cab full-size trucks are as close to do-it-all machines as you can buy in a new car dealership today; they can carry up to half a dozen people, swaddle their occupants in luxury, tow and lug more than anything short of commercial trucks, and go places most passenger vehicles dare not tread.
But if there’s one place pickup trucks fall flat, it’s trunk space. Sure, there are some exceptions to the rule; the Honda Ridgeline, for example, has a small lockable cargo area carved out under its bed, and new electric pickups like the Rivian R1T and the Ford F-150 Lightning use their EV packaging to free up trunk space where gas engines reside in other pickups. But compared to the likes of other similarly sized vehicles — minivans, larger SUVs, even some station wagons — most pickup trucks come up severely lacking in the safe storage department.
Luckily, when the automotive industry closes a door, it opens a window — and in this case, a bevy of aftermarket solutions for the problem have flown in through it. Truck bed caps have been around for decades, but Flated is bringing something new to the table with its Air Topper. We strapped it to the top of two different pickups to find out how well it works.

Air Topper
Pros
- Sturdy enough for regular use
- Folds down when not needed
Cons
- Convenience doesn't come cheap
- Still somewhat unwieldy to handle solo