Try looking for a Freedom caravan....very light and may be what you need.
Main dealer for the UK is based in Stafford. New Freedoms would be out of your price range but you may find a good used one for that price...try Ebay or Caravan Finder
Anyway, I have a Citroen Xsara auto, 2.0 diesel. It's a great towcar. The limit is 1100Kgs - more than yours, can't understand it?
I used to tow a Bailey - 1994 Oakmere (dealer special based on the Beachcomber 350/2), the MTPLM was only 817 Kgs which is well within your limits, and it had all mod cons. Great little van, loved it.
Before that I had a 1995 Freedom Microlite, liked that as well but much less roomy and only 67 Kgs lighter so not a great weight saving, and it didn't have a fridge or loo.
It was after the mid nineties that vans started getting heavier.
------------- Caz
If you can't see the light at the end of the tunnel, just keep going till you go round the bend.
The Microlite is a very small pop roof caravan. Slightly heavier 650KG unladen weight 750 KG Loaded is the Sunseeker or Clubman. The Sunseeker can sleep 4 at a push - a double and bunks.
The great advantage is 1. These little caravans are all GRP so good insulation and no wooden frame to rot there is even GRP under the wooden floor.
They were cheap in the first place so second hand is good on the pocket.
There have been few changes over the years so all spares are available - I have just restored an elderly Sunseeker that spent 3 years as a garden shed a bit of grease and I towed it 300 miles home some carpentry making new furniture and we have a custom caravan for £1500 we could have purchased one that needed no work.
Have a look at the website http://www.freedomcaravans.com/
There is one on ebay at the moment for £2950 but keep looking and one will be there for less than that.
Quote: Originally posted by sueturnersmith on 08/8/2010
I'm disabled, aged 62, so a pop-up is not really an option.
Actually a pop up may be your only option. I say that because to get a 2 or a 4 berth within the price range that you have stated, you will probably need to do a fair bit of work on it to make it usable.
Pop ups (like ours, see the gallery) raise their roofs on Gas Struts and so they almost raise themselves. Same idea as a hatchback on a car.
Really, what you go for will very much depend on what you are able to manage yourself, but please remember, that you will do more sleeping in a caravan than any other activity (if you can call sleeping an activity ) and as such, bedding and the berth layout should be your most important consideration.
Nothing will put you off a caravan quicker than a bad night's sleep.