HaulingAss
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 3, 2020
- Threads
- 21
- Messages
- 8,112
- Reaction score
- 16,504
- Location
- Western Washington, USA
- Vehicles
- Cybertruck DM, 2010 F-150, 2018 Performance Model 3, 2024 Performance Model 3

I would probably skip the spare tire and scissors jack (use a plug kit since you already have a compressor). I would skip the propane and generator too, and add around 1000 watts of solar and a battery power generator since it doesn't sound like you will be on a tight schedule and could just camp and hang out and let the sun do it's thing, if you needed the juice. This would eliminate the need to fill the propane tanks when resupplying.If driving range is an concern, I'll take along a couple of 30 lb propane tanks and this Westinghouse Dual Fuel iGen4500 generator:
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I can add 30 kWh of charge to CT's battery from a 30 lb bottle of propane. The iGen4500 generator has a continuous power output of 3300W on propane, 3700W on gasoline. At 3.3kW, it takes 9 hours to add 30 kWh to CT's battery. Fortunately, it's one of the quietest generators of its size for camping.
The Cybertruck doesn't come with a spare tire, so I ordered one from TSportline. It's a full size steel wheel with 285/65R20 tire. I'll carry the spare in the vault if possible. I want to avoid a tire carrier that would increase aero drag. Unfortunately, it's on back order at present.
Speaking of tires, I bought a 4 ton Yellow Jacket bottle jack. It's much smaller than the Tesla jack with a lifting range from 7 3/8" to 14 5/16". I raise the truck to "Extraction Level" first (16") then set the jack on a 4" block and raise the truck to 18 1/4" to remove and replace a tire. The tires weigh 87 lbs, so putting a tire on without lifting it requires aligning the studs with the wheel holes as closely as possible.
I think you might need to adjust the amount of charge you would get on the generator from 30 kWh to more like 25 kWh in 9 hours and the propane will probably not power the generator as long as you think at full power in most cases. It would make more sense to visit the closest campground with level II charging the day before you go off-grid so you enter the backcountry with a full charge rather than charging in the field.
But there are many ways to skin a cat, I just think you might find charging in the field is not a great solution. A solar backup can ensure you are never stranded but plan your trips to not need it.
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