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| smegballs |
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 smegballs World Chat Champion
Joined: 28 Oct 2007 Karma :  
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| linuxyeti |
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 linuxyeti World Chat Champion
Joined: 06 Oct 2006 Karma :   
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 Posted: 11:20 - 16 Oct 2016 Post subject: Re: Camper-van decision |
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| smegballs wrote: |
The Bad
Poor fuel economy
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Hi I have a Chausson Flash 03 year 2009, Ford transit based, 2.5 cdi engine, averages around 30mpg at the speeds you're talking about. Before that had a 1995 Fiat Ducato based motorhome, that too averaged around 30mpg at the speeds you mention. I think your fuel consumption is likely to be more as a result of the weight & aerodynamic effects of the motorhome. Obviously, a bog standard van shape is more aerodynamic that of a motorhome, especially 1 with the bed bulge above the cab.
So, taking that aside, the more likely problems will be just age related, what you will notice though is the engine on the older motorhome will be apprecialbly louder when driving, well, it was so in my case !!.
Another thing to consider, is, on the route you're planning, are there any age related restrictions on road use in those locations, also, whilst insurance will be easy to get, european breakdown cover, at least from a UK based insurer, may be harder due to the age of the motorhome, and the percieved risk that recovery back to the UK may be higher.
Cheers
Tony ____________________ Beware what photos you upload, or link to on here, especially if you have family members on them |
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| duhawkz |
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 duhawkz World Chat Champion

Joined: 03 Dec 2006 Karma :  
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| duhawkz |
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 duhawkz World Chat Champion

Joined: 03 Dec 2006 Karma :  
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 Posted: 11:46 - 16 Oct 2016 Post subject: |
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https://m.facebook.com/groups/1645330245688647
If your not alreay a member, join the facebook group above stuff comes for sale there ____________________ "The guy is a worthless cunt and I honestly believe I would be a slightly happier person if he died." - Chris-Red |
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| smegballs |
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 smegballs World Chat Champion
Joined: 28 Oct 2007 Karma :  
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| faffergotgunz |
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 faffergotgunz Nova Slayer

Joined: 10 Feb 2016 Karma :    
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 Posted: 12:10 - 16 Oct 2016 Post subject: |
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Motorhome all the way!
Keep it in good Knick and you'll be able to sell it for a similar price. Having a toilet, proper oven, bed ect, all ready to go will be priceless. You can then concentrate on fun and useful mods such as solar panel, USB sockets, decorating, winterizing ect...
To put it into perspective, our 1990 transit CI motorhome cost us 350 quid (mates rates mind). It leaked like a sieve, a few hundred later on the internals, some MOT prep and it's a peach.
The older engines are so easy to work on. Reliable for long trips (and fixable roadside). Ours is a n\a 2.5 diesel. No ECU ect, hit the starter motor with a hammer type thing. Make sure you service the belts, battery and oil, otherwise big van engines like that will go on for years.
As for fuel, 30mpg tops. Fuel is cheaper in Europe, so are Campsites, so no point worrying over 10mpg to be honest. You'll be spending more on booze and food. Even with 70hp and 2.3 tons, we cruise at 60mph, with the lorry's, it's a nice way to travel. Hills are fine due to 150 pound feet of torque. We've got up mountain passes in Switzerland and even Porlock Hill in Devon (all be it in 1st gear lol).
Parking is fine, once you get used to it they handle well for vans on the twisties too. Bit like a 125, just keep the speed up
Best thing we've ever bought a motorhome. 9k miles in Europe over 3 trips in 3 years. Opens up a World of fun. Average trip cost of 2 weeks is 2k all in. Fuel, stellplatz\campsites, booze, food and ferry. Visiting 6 countrys for two people, 2-3 weeks at 2k is cheap IMO!
A motorhoming Bible in Europe is "ReiseMobil Border Atlas" (eBay item 172356884916 for example for an old one). It's in German but easy to understand. Lists 100s of Campsites from zero cost to 20 euros a night for Germany and Europe. Literally put in the GPS details into the Sat nav and off you go.
With an old motorhome just make sure the roof doesn't leak (We use roofing rubber paint every year on it), the engine is services, take tools and spare bolts with you, good tyres and a spare wheel (plus know how to get it off the van and fit it - funny story there ), a good battery and a leisure battery (go with a gel type), some security for it aswell. You'll be good to go.
All we've had while abroad is the alternator bolt snap in Switzerland. Visit to a garage in the rain and 2 hours later it was back on with some threaded rod (luckily the belt was saved - take a spare), the exhaust mount failed this year, so I used some SWA cable to hang it back on lol.
Got a bit carried away on this post but one of my favourite past times! ____________________ Sent from Samsmums mobile using Tapanarse |
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| J4mes |
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 J4mes World Chat Champion
Joined: 18 Mar 2011 Karma :  
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| duhawkz |
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 duhawkz World Chat Champion

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| Nb |
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 Nb World Chat Champion
Joined: 17 May 2005 Karma :  
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 Posted: 19:57 - 16 Oct 2016 Post subject: |
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In that price range i'd say go for an older transit (mk5)or toyota hiace perhaps.They are both slow by modern standards but bomb proof reliable and will still cruise at 60mph with ear plugs in.
You can then build it to your plans and hopefully save some weight over a proper motorhome of a similar age, which from my experience of dealing with talbots and old ducatos that are heavy as hell and drive like a water balloon with wheels.
Newer vans in that price range will be ticking time bombs, and will pretty much all come with dmfs, common rail and egr and all that shite. ____________________ Cbr1100xx blackbird gone, mk4 golf gt tdi chav now
Colin1 wrote 'Im grateful for what i can get, which isnt all that much.'
Columbus travel insurance are crap!! Do not use! |
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| Alpineandy |
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 Alpineandy World Chat Champion
Joined: 18 Mar 2015 Karma :   
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 Posted: 22:17 - 16 Oct 2016 Post subject: |
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I can't add much here but would go for an older/mechanically simpler camper if it were me. Unless you're taking a family, a low roof/smaller body would probably be more manageable.
Then you have to work out how to secure the bike to it (or 'In It') .
I lost contact 4/5 years back with a friend that bought an old (late 80s rather than early 90s) Renault camper. It was low mileage and a really nice one but it turned out that it was real cheap for a reason. It had a badly chipped headlight and RHD headlamps were impossible to get hold of. Last thing I remember was that he was looking into fitting some round generic headlamps (VW??) in the rectangular headlamp holes and making some fibreglass fillets surrounds, so he could get an MOT.
So do some research on the base vehicle to make sure there aren't any unobtainable or horribly expensive bits needed to pass an MOT. ____________________ The above comment isn't necessarily the truth and anyone that says it is, is only correct if it's the truth or they're bigger than me. |
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| Robby |
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 Robby Dirty Old Man

Joined: 16 May 2002 Karma :   
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| Kai.Wilson |
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 Kai.Wilson Spanner Monkey
Joined: 26 Sep 2009 Karma :     
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 Posted: 09:06 - 17 Oct 2016 Post subject: |
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If it was me I'd buy a summit around 100k diesel miles lwb or extra long possible high roof and convert myself
Find cheap kitchen cupboards for units and a single or even a small double for bed a camp stove with them can gas and a camping shower (water in a bag to wash) and buy some bottle of water for super market
I just found my dream van... Search for yours via Auto Trader #DrivenByMe
https://www.autotrader.co.uk/classified/advert/201610088557118
Plenty of space then not too modern with some power |
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| jowettdriver |
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 jowettdriver Borekit Bruiser

Joined: 09 Sep 2008 Karma : 
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 Posted: 09:45 - 17 Oct 2016 Post subject: |
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I did my own conversion a couple of years ago so here are some thoughts for you.
I bought a very cheap van £800 for an 16 year old Fiat Ducato. 2.5 turbo diesel, engine is actually an IVECO lump and generally regarded as being unbreakable and capable of a million miles if looked after. Mine has 220000 miles on the clock and runs like a new van still. I did do some preventative maintenance at the beginning of this year like changing engine mounts etc. I had a slight oil leak from the sump gasket, so I removed it to fit a new gasket and the insides of the engine looked like the day it came out of the factory. So I would say do not worry about buying a higher millage older (pre common rail etc.) van from a reliability point of view they really can take the mileage.
BUT.... Every year I do have to weld some more metal in to it. All Fiat van bodies were galvanised from the mid 90's onwards but this does not seem to stop the dreaded tin worm. I'm lucky that I have the ability and facilitys to weld, if I had to have paid someone to do it I'd have spent thousands by now on new sills, wheel arch inners, inner wings etc.
As far as a conversion goes, I bought a knackered caravan. Not that old but riddled with damp so I bought it for £300. I stripped out a wealth of parts, not just the obvious like the kitchen moldings, cassette toilets, windows and skylights but also little things like hinges and catches. Small but they add up if you start buying them individually. All in, including the van, my unit stands me in at £3000
The other main consideration is the time involved. Working a normal 5 day week, I basically gave up 6 months of my life to build it. Every evening and every weekend I spent outside working on it.
I don't want this to become a Tef post so i'll stop here. If you want to know more, I'm happy to share my experiences and any advice, its not the easy route but if you buy right you can save a lot of money.
Cheers Tim.
Also, head over to https://sbmcc.co.uk/forum/ and have a look, a wealth of self build info on there! ____________________ Bikes: 1980 Honda CX500, 2003 Honda CB250, 1980 Honda CG125 |
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| Polarbear |
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 Polarbear Super Spammer

Joined: 24 Feb 2007 Karma :  
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| hmmmnz |
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 hmmmnz Super Spammer

Joined: 22 Aug 2006 Karma :   
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 Posted: 10:56 - 18 Oct 2016 Post subject: |
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my 2 cents,
history: 2 van conversions (delica and mazda b2000 lwb high roof)
1 people mover conversion (toyota estima)
and 1 old merc motorhome strip down and rebuild
(thread here )
currently helping a friend convert a small bus (merc 609d)
so essentially all conversions.
the downside to vans and the people mover was space.
thats it. for long term its a ball ache, you need to use camp grounds quite often so you can wash your balls,
and you have to set up the bed and take it down each day, (gets pretty annoying, to the point where you dont bother taking down the bed)
the upside is they are reasonably fast-ish can park easily in any car park, easy to get through small streets, etc etc
the old camper, old campers leak, unless they are well maintained or have been repaired, mine was so fucked it required a full strip down,
on the plus side the setup is pretty damn good,
bed above the cab is always set up, there is a decent-ish shower and toilet, a table with seats and a sofa, and has a decent amount of work space and storage.
down side is its big, slow and pretty ugly, but its as reliable as a vehicle could get, mines pretty much rust free as well, which is nice and always flys through the mot. mileage is pretty good as well, 25mpg
current bus conversion,
set up is bang on as there is loads of space, big bath room, diesel heater, log burner, sofas, drop down bed,
solar panels, decent sound system, etc etc
down side to that is it needs to be coneverted to motohome with dvla, it also needs a truck licence to drive it, and the conversion is about £10k and its still not finished and probably about 500-1000 man hours in it.
its hard to recommend 1 styl;e over another,
but if i was going to europe trip for months and months again, id be doing it in my old merc camper.
if i was going to winter through, then it would be the bus,
and if it was just a week or 2 then the vans
if it was just the weekend, then the estima people mover would win. ____________________ the humans are dead
I kick arse for the lord
Wiring Diagrams BIDNIP it bitches |
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| Polarbear |
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 Polarbear Super Spammer

Joined: 24 Feb 2007 Karma :  
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| G |
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 G The Voice of Reason
Joined: 02 Feb 2002 Karma :     
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 Posted: 18:13 - 18 Oct 2016 Post subject: Re: Camper-van decision |
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What sort of things do you expect to be using/not using?
Also; I was always against caravans, but they do have lots of benefits, so more of a convert now.
While travelling you can't just lean into the back. But you can leave it somewhere setup then drive into a town without having to stow everything etc.
You should be able to get a very usable one from about £500, which gives you a good bit of cash to cover things like possibly higher ferry fees.
Insurance should be covered under normal car insurance, so probably a good bit cheaper.
I've thought before about getting a frugal hatchback (slipstreaming trucks I've had my the mpg on my clio diesel max out at over 99.9mpg), make a bed on the passenger side and have the basics with me. Shower at services, swimming pools, whatever.
Still have a good bit more stuff than bike touring, which I didn't find particularly limiting - and just need to find somewhere to park up and roll over to the other side, rather than setting up tents etc. (I'd go for blackout blinds all around though.)
With 100mpg, could make fuel, which was probably my biggest cost on the bike last a lot longer. |
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| nickyboy4 |
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 nickyboy4 Nova Slayer
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| J4mes |
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 J4mes World Chat Champion
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| smegballs |
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 smegballs World Chat Champion
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| Robby |
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 Robby Dirty Old Man

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| smegballs |
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 smegballs World Chat Champion
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| MaybeGuy |
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 MaybeGuy Super Spammer

Joined: 12 Mar 2007 Karma :     
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 Posted: 03:25 - 19 Oct 2016 Post subject: |
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Minbus? ____________________ Blue_SV650S wrote: it was a sh1te wheelie, but it proves that he can get it up in 3rd and can do angles. In summery, mattsprattuk is a gobby little sh1tebag, dopehead tw4t, but sadly for all of us, he probably isn't THAT full of sh1te!!
Kickstart wrote: Hi I tend to agree with Matt. All the best Keith
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 G The Voice of Reason
Joined: 02 Feb 2002 Karma :     
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| LustyLew |
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 LustyLew World Chat Champion

Joined: 19 Apr 2004 Karma :  
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 Posted: 10:41 - 19 Oct 2016 Post subject: |
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Back in the early 00's lots of private ambulance providers used Sprinters. AS mentioned, very common and pretty quick. They has a phase of using upholstered seats and for some odd reason, the walls!
They already had 12v electrics in for lights, and some equipment, but now the CQC is around they are deemed unsuitable for ambulance work due to infection control etc.
There's probably still a few around for sale. The ones I crewed had three seats up front and two road worthy seats in the back that folded up and away.
Might be worth a punt if you can find one... ____________________ Like a Yorkie - I'm not for the girls  |
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 9 years, 258 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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