looks good but would hate the thought of it coming off and causing accident, but i suppose if they get delivered in them they must be ok, well thats when they are fitted correctly and they are on back of BIG lorry hidden by the cab, or is that just me being too worried,
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We have got a front cover, used it once and that was on a short journey 10 minutes down the road. It stopped in place, you have ties to tighten it, nothing was flapping about on it. Our cover goes further up towards the roof of the van.
Quote: Originally posted by GAYNOR68 on 01/4/2010
looks good but would hate the thought of it coming off and causing accident, but i suppose if they get delivered in them they must be ok, well thats when they are fitted correctly and they are on back of BIG lorry hidden by the cab, or is that just me being too worried,
funnily enough i quizzed the bailey dealer about these and he said hes never seen any of their vans come with these on.
held on with suckers apparently, well any dealing ive had with suckers has usually ended with the item on the floor 5 minutes later and thats without a 60 mph wind assisting !!!
Forgot to add, our cover you slide into the awning rail, the tighten the straps. Not too sure if i would trust suckers, i would worry if they would stop on.
Forgot to add, our cover you slide into the awning rail, the tighten the straps. Not too sure if i would trust suckers, i would worry if they would stop on.
the pegasus / olympus doesnt have an offside awning rail hence the suckers to hold it in place...or not as maybe..lol
If the same cover is used for both Olympus & Pegasus then how can the fit be great as the Olympus is 4" narrower than the Pegasus. That's a lot of material to flap in the wind...
Why is the van in the picture a Senator????? It would add confidence in the product if it was actually on the correct vans they are selling it for!!!
Quote: Originally posted by navver on 10/4/2010
Wouldn't mud flaps for the car be better.
standard mudflaps on 4x4 not deep enough , made extensions that bolt onto originals out of industrial rubber belting , works well but a hassle to fit and look unsightly to be on all the time.the ford ones arent really deep enough either for the mondeo we also tow with occasionally. if the cover works its a great idea ,just unsure about the offside sucker arrangement. mudflaps on your car wont stop stuff chucked up from vehicles passing possibly hitting the front of van so this eliminates all the possibilities of stone damage on the vulnerable lower half of these van fronts
one majopr thing i can see wrong with them is the fact that you cant see any of the lights or the reflectors on the front of the van, as for it only being for a bailey, what a load of rubbish it will fit any van that has awning rails on both sides of the van regardless of make, as for the price, i could make one for 1/4 the price
I've spoken with several dealers over the last few days (considering change of van), none of whom have ever seen vans delivered with these covers on.
I did meet a couple in the Lakes last year who carried a roll of industrial 'cling-film', the type you wrap palletised goods with. They simply ran a single length of the stuff over the front of their van and it stuck well and did the same job. Roll was about 60cm wide and they simply peeled the film off when on site. A bit excessive I think, but they felt it worked for them.