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01/2/2008 at 9:52am
Location: BRIDGNORTH SHROPSHIRE Outfit: 2013 VW CC GT & 2012 LUNAR CLUBMAN SE
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All I would say, as someone who has a 2007 twin axle Elddis Crusader Cyclone and has considered downsizing is that there seems to be pro-s and cons with both twin and single axles. the only downside i can see of the twin axles is the manouverability when towing through small villages, city centres, towns or country lanes etc where roads are tight and tight turns can be a nightmare as you can always risk clipping the rear as it swings round or mounting the kerb. In terms of manouverability on pitches we have a Truma mover and it is fantastic. I have manouvered onto pitches as wide as our van is long using it and the flexibility it offers still amazes me. In terms of handling, I have never owned/towed a single axle van but all I would say is that you only have to drive down the motorway and see how a single axle bounces and snakes around much more than a twin maybe this is down to the fact that singles seem to sit higher i don't know but they never look as stable no matter what vehicle is towing it. Twin axles sit lower and always look well planted.
Turning to the subject of tow cars (if this is something you are think you will need to address if you go down the twin axle route) I personally wouldn't tow a twin axle with anything other than a proper 4wd. This is especially true if you get a summer like last year and the ground is wet and you want to shift your van on grass/boggy ground. I have helped two people with front/ rear wheel drive cars in the last 6 months to tow their outfit onto firmer ground, one occassion was literally just wet grass! I personally can't extol the virtues of a Discovery 3 highly enough. I have previously owned 2 present shape Range Rovers and I changed to the Discovery 3 last year. Towing the same van the Discovery 3 is a dream. It will pull the heaviest van up the longets Frenchy motorway incline at 65-70 without any fuss but watch out for tyre wear!!! By way of comparision I have also towed with an XC90, Land Cruiser, Shogun and recently a Kia the latter being the a very pleasant experience and the one I would go for ovver the Volvo, Land Cruiser or Shogun. My reasons? The XC90 in diesel form is woefully underpowered, the Shogun crude and the Land Cruiser never felt stable at anything over 55... For value for money the Kia would be a good bet but for me it would be a Discovery 3 or V8 Range Rover diesel every time! Before anyone wants to come back with "oh but the reliability" I can only say that I change my car every 18 months and do 50,000 miles (mostly towing) before each change and can say I have never an issue with the Range Rovers or my Discovery which is now on 25,000 miles...
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