I have looked at 3 different movers on the internet for my twin axle van which weighs in at 1690kg max. They are all 2wd motors and i would like 4wd but the cost is way to expensive for me. I have scaled my search down to:
E-go twin axle mover £799 (just out on the market.
Enduro twin mover £799
Towsure twin mover £699
Does anyone have an opinion on these and 2wd twin movers in general? I know you can't spin a twin on axis but how sharp can they turn? Could you turn one round a 90 degree bend as you back it onto a pitch?
Hi
We have just recently bought the same caravan as you.
After extensive research and posting on here my OH has decided that Powertouch is the best one.
Will be interested to see what replies you get on the ones you have mentioned.
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Quote: Originally posted by Jeff + Sharon M on 12/3/2010
Hi
We have just recently bought the same caravan as you.
After extensive research and posting on here my OH has decided that Powertouch is the best one.
Will be interested to see what replies you get on the ones you have mentioned.
Would that be the 2wd version of the powertouch. Have you seen one working yet.
Thanks
Mjw
i have pwrtch 2 wd on my sprite quatro and its ok as you say the turning circle is not great but seems better going back wards than forwards to me but may be that is just an illusion was thinking of up grading but the price tag is to much right now
i have pwrtch 2 wd on my sprite quatro and its ok as you say the turning circle is not great but seems better going back wards than forwards to me but may be that is just an illusion was thinking of up grading but the price tag is to much right now
ps it is a twin axle
How do you find it when trying to back it onto a pitch at 90˚
No, you will not be able to turn through 90 degrees while reversing onto a pitch using a 2 wheel mover on a twin, you would be much better reversing it using the car.
The twins are much easier to reverse than the single axles.
Using a 4 wheel mover you would probably be able to do it, but there is the weight of them to consider as well as the price.
The width of the site road and the size of the pitch would also have a bearing on it. We saw a twin with a Reich 4 wheel mover do exactly that on the CC site in Lowestoft, it was pretty impressive.
We did not want the extra weight so have a 2 wheel mover (Truma TE), which we find adequate. We can get the van off our street and parked at one side of the drive with a little shuffling back and forth.But we do not have a gateway to go through, we have the full 8 metre width of the drive available.
Our drive is a 1 in 10 slope, the van weighs 1900 kg MTPLM.
Going on a pitch, OH reverses it on then unhitches and uses the mover to put it exactly where he wants it.
Quote: Originally posted by jennifernn on 12/3/2010
No, you will not be able to turn through 90 degrees while reversing onto a pitch using a 2 wheel mover on a twin, you would be much better reversing it using the car.
The twins are much easier to reverse than the single axles.
Using a 4 wheel mover you would probably be able to do it, but there is the weight of them to consider as well as the price.
The width of the site road and the size of the pitch would also have a bearing on it. We saw a twin with a Reich 4 wheel mover do exactly that on the CC site in Lowestoft, it was pretty impressive.
We did not want the extra weight so have a 2 wheel mover (Truma TE), which we find adequate. We can get the van off our street and parked at one side of the drive with a little shuffling back and forth.But we do not have a gateway to go through, we have the full 8 metre width of the drive available.
Our drive is a 1 in 10 slope, the van weighs 1900 kg MTPLM.
Going on a pitch, OH reverses it on then unhitches and uses the mover to put it exactly where he wants it.
Thanks for this advice.
I think i will perfect reversing the van whilst i save for a 4wd mover.
They may even come down in price in the next 12 months as there are new makes becoming available.
Thanks
Mjw
The "electronics" for the 4 wheel mover, or even a 2 wheel on a twin, are complicated, so I would not expect them to come down in price quickly. Especially not with the weak Pound.
Unless you need one for parking the van at home/in storage in a really tight space, the weight penalty makes them pretty undesirable. You do realise that a 4 wheel mover will use at least 60kg of your payload?? Double that of the others.
It is quite a chunk to lose. One way round that could be to uprate the plate on your van (if possible)
Quote: Originally posted by jennifernn on 12/3/2010
The "electronics" for the 4 wheel mover, or even a 2 wheel on a twin, are complicated, so I would not expect them to come down in price quickly. Especially not with the weak Pound.
Unless you need one for parking the van at home/in storage in a really tight space, the weight penalty makes them pretty undesirable. You do realise that a 4 wheel mover will use at least 60kg of your payload?? Double that of the others.
It is quite a chunk to lose. One way round that could be to uprate the plate on your van (if possible)
the weight is not an issue for me as i carry all my extras such as awning, furniture etc in theback of my double cab pickup.
I have the Povertouch 2WD with actuator on my twin axle and it does take a lot of shunting back and forth compared to when I had a single axle. It is powerful though as I have an incline on my drive which it does with no bother.
------------- Albino, Can"t say fairer than that !
Its been known, that if your 2wd twin axle mover has been fitted to the rear wheels, like they are designed to be fitted, then raising the jockey to take the pressure off the front wheels can aid the turning of a twin axle caravan.
we have a powrtouch twin on our sprite quattro.....after much research and help here, i decided to fit them on the front wheels.....so i do lower the nose wheel somewhat to help traction.
i have to have it as we cannot reverse into the driveway due to length of the whole unit and we cant push it as its a 3 man job to go up an incline.
it wont move 90 degrees, but I do get it on a narrow drive from a single lane road...that is just about 2 car widths. This means the jockey needs to touch the opposite road kerb to get on/off.
with a little practice it does turn very tight, but takes a bit of time as the outside moter on the turn is doing all the work whislt the inner just does its pulse.
incidentally they are easy to fit yourslef if your happy with messing with spanners and 12v electrics.
Yes, I would agree, the more you use it the better you get at the turning. There is a bit of a knack in judging when to go which way.
When we were in France last year we had a few site owners who were dubious that we would be able to get onto some of the more awkward pitches, and were surprised we had no problem!
Whave a 2 wheel powrtouch on our Bailey 620/6 and its pretty pants at any turning, going straight its ok but I have to involve the kids to shunt it round along with the mover to get the turn tighter, really wish we had spent a bit more on a 4 wheel mover but could not really afford it at the time and it seems a waste to change it now.
Its not a waste, if you ring Powrwheel they may be able to upgrade you to the AWD version by just adding the cost of the two new drive units and an AWD electronics. I would ask the question to them.
I had a Powertouch 4x4 mover fitted to my Elddis Crusader twin axle. I think its the most amazing piece of kit. We had a Pageant Provence previously and had the single version which also was excellent. We wanted to move to a twin axle but I was concerned that the single version may not be able to cope with the tight turns on our sloping drive, so went for the 4 x 4. Worth every penny and the extra weight. I find it turns the twin much tighter than I thought it would and without it would not be able to keep the van at home. If you can spare the weight allowance I would go for the 4wd version every time.