Excuse the extraordinarily silly questions, but I just want to check. We have a new seasonal pitch with a full awning that is left up permanently from March to October. So far, no problems. The awning was previously used on a seasonal pitch and the previous owner bought extra roof and support poles, so it has 7 roof poles and 7 vertical poles along the front (caravan is around 22ft).
It's a steel frame and I happen to have 2 other roof and 2 other vertical poles spare from an old awning I never use. I wondered if the awning would be rendered even more stable if I added to two extra verticals to the side walls to provide for greater rigidity. As I say, no problems yet, but the man on the pitch next to me recently told me his entire awning was ripped off the side of his 'van during a storm once. Anyway, is it a case of the more poles the better - or can extra poles cause unforseen problems that just haven't occurred to me?
I would have thought having it pegged down securely would be more important? Our porch awning collapsed one night due to me not being bothered to peg out guy lines before bed,it rained in the night and water collected on sagging fabric and snapped the metal pole running across the awning roof. Our Bradcot has five poles on a 990cm awning and has been fine. We use the internally fitted storm straps and ground anchors,the only problem has been the outer pegs coming out,usually on a hardstanding. Use decent,long,screw in pegs and it should be ok.(No liability accepted!!!)
The extra roof "rafters" are to try and stop the water "pooling" on the roof, or to limit the volume and hence weight of any pool.
I was walking past an awning once that at that moment suffered a ripped roof from just such a pooling overload, and it was not even raining at the time.
I have a seasonal pitch and the awning is up until november , i was unsure at 1st how to secure her properly , i ended up erecting the awning then rolling the excess ground flap around 4x2 timbers that have been screwed into the concrete , the outer pegging points the plastic flexi pieces have been tied to screwed in eye bolts , there has been 2 storm straps added for extra safety , i also added extra supports and shes solid as a rock i even (sadly ) ran a bead of mastick along the 4x2 timbers just incase some water wanted to creep underneath , if the awning wants to take off then the caravan which is tied down with chain and bolted to the concrete will have to go aswell .
I have a Bradcot Classic 1030 with Fibre XL poles and internal screw-in storm straps. After problems with pooling of water I bought 2 sets of roof/leg poles from my local Dealer (Campbells of Preston). They have spare poles in their awning department which they sold me very cheaply. Not yet tried in heavy rain.
We only tend to use our awning during our long summer hols on the Continent. I am wary of having it up in high winds as a few years ago a previous Bradcot awning with alloy poles blew up onto the 'van roof during a severe storm in Italy.
Dear all - thanks so much for the tips. Seems there's no obvious harm in using the extras, so I might just go ahead. I've used those screwpegs to peg it down (it's a gravel hardstanding) and they seem to work well - no movement yet. I like the idea of the wooden battens securing the plastic flap at the bottom - but I guess I'd have problems securing that on gravel? As it is, I'm risking ruining the plastic flap by tucking it under the extra vertical poles. I've added a few layers of duct tape to the points on the flap where the poles sit - to minimise the risk of the poles making holes - has worked so far. Not ideal, but it seems secure and cuts down on drafts.