Opus Folding Camper

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XJ75

Original Poster:

493 posts

153 months

Thursday 20th July 2023
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Has anyone got/had one?

https://www.opuscamper.co.uk/

We are a family of 4 (kids aged 2 and 4). We bought a large air tent in the spring and really love camping holidays, but we'd love the option of going away for a weekend at short notice. Although the air tent is easier than a poled tent, I still find it a bit of a faff putting it up and down on my own while the wife watches the kids.

The Opus goes up in about 5 minutes, mostly at the push of a button. For short trips we would use it by itself and for longer trips we would add the awning.

The wife would also like a few more creature comforts. I don't like the idea of towing a caravan, plus I feel that the Opus would give us more of a camping experience.

I've looked at other folding campers and trailer tents but IMO the Opus is miles ahead in both form and function.

Thanks for any tips/advice!


Chicken Chaser

8,413 posts

237 months

Thursday 20th July 2023
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I looked at one of these when we outgrew our Transporter. The Opus wasn't cheap, it's pretty but if requiring a trailer tent, you're probably better served by the likes of Pennine. They're pretty heavy at over 1000 kilos. In the end we bought a caravan, a Bailey Pursuit. It's under 1400kg fully laden, and we pay £300 a year to store it locally. The good thing about a caravan is weather is not a consideration and van values should remain strong for longer. We've camped from February to November in ours, something I couldn't see us doing in a trailer tent.

rustyuk

4,705 posts

224 months

Thursday 20th July 2023
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We found a folding camper was much better.

sjg

7,586 posts

278 months

Friday 21st July 2023
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Been mildly obsessed with them for years, they don’t come up secondhand much and new is £££. Got to have a good poke around the one in Camping Intl though.

Showing the canvas being up in a few mins is fine but there’s still quite a bit of interior faff after that as anything above lid level needs assembling and all the kitchen bits need hooking up. The extra awning looks at least as much effort as an air tent. There’s not a lot of storage and most is under the lounge seats. My kids are a bit older but you can almost guarantee squabbles if they’re sharing a double with one needing to climb over in the night. Optional toilet has no privacy. Fridge is just a small camping one. And as it’s canvas it needs to be bone dry before packing away.

On the flip side, you are up off the ground, it’s a decent lounge area and kitchen, you can carry bikes etc on top and it’ll fit in a garage for storage. But ultimately it’s still a lot of the camping drawbacks plus the towing/storage bit.

On balance I think I’d rather have a Basecamp 4 and it’ll be much more usable in the feb/oct half terms. Or else if a trailer tent / folding camper really appeals it’s a massive premium over something like a Camp-Let. We just got a smaller bell tent for the odd weekend and take a simpler setup, no cupboards, tables, etc.

If you fancy trying one (and it’s a very good idea before spending so much) there’s someone on Camplify with one in Bicester. You pick a campsite within x miles, they deliver it and pick it up again after. Maybe worth doing a comparison with some alternatives (caravan, campervan, etc) over a few weekends.

Edited by sjg on Friday 21st July 00:37


Edited by sjg on Friday 21st July 09:24

XJ75

Original Poster:

493 posts

153 months

Friday 21st July 2023
quotequote all
Thanks for the replies.

I think if you put tents at one end of the spectrum and caravans at the other, we are more at the tent end of the scale in terms of what we think we like. Our holidays are going to be very much outdoors based, and I'm not sure extending the season is necessarily something we are interested in, although I guess it would be a nice option to have.

One interesting thing that I hadn't previously considered is the idea of lightweight caravans. I had assumed that the challenge of towing was mostly down to the size/shape of a caravan, I hadn't considered that weight is probably a bigger factor.

Thanks for the Camplify suggestion, I hadn't come across this before and definitely keen to hire an Opus to try it out.

ETA: The other appeal of the Opus is that once it's up, it's up. There's no faffing around putting tables down to make beds etc.

Edited by XJ75 on Friday 21st July 10:31

miconone

33 posts

151 months

Friday 21st July 2023
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We've had an AirOpus since July 2021 and used it for around a hundred nights, in the UK and on the continent. We got as far as Dubrovnik last year. Bought the 'Full Monty' spec, but have since sold the air awning, skirts and microwave and found that the base camper with the air sun canopy is best for us. That's two midde-aged adults and a grandchild every now and again.
Pros - we can store it in the garage, easy to tow, very comfortable for sleeping, lounging and eating inside, good shade and a degree of protection from rain with the sun canopy, less crawling around than setting up a tent.
Cons - more set up than a caravan, minimal storage for clothes, we can't bring ourselves to use the porta potti inside so set up a toilet tent. Some use the air awning for storage/porta potti.
I'd regard a motor mover as essential, especially if maneuvering in confined spaces.
We have a motorhome on order as we want to travel more with one night stopovers, so this will be our last year with the Opus.

HTH!



Edited by miconone on Saturday 29th July 12:04

Sway

31,304 posts

207 months

Friday 21st July 2023
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They're 'okay', and do have some nice features - but massively overpriced and some awful design bits that are fashion over function.

Compared to a Pennine (we have had one for a few years now).

  • slightly faster to put up, but pennine is up and kettle on in ten minutes so incremental gain.
  • less total, and less practical storage.
  • Poorer bed pods
  • less capable kitchen
  • better carrying capacity on the lid when folded
  • more modern design
  • much better loo/washroom in the pennine (for the equipped models, ours doesn't have one and we've never missed it
Overall, we adore our folding camper for all the good reasons. Super comfortable for extended periods, quick and easy to setup. Pretty much fully equipped at all times (including bedding made up on beds when folded). Easy to store and tow. Oh, and loads more interior/living/sleeping space than lightweight caravans!

F31Simon

48 posts

138 months

Friday 28th July 2023
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We bought the new air opus in Sept last year after looking at many many options. For us its the best of the options and the least compromised. When its up its got great space and comfort, its easy to tow, and can be stored in the garage,

When we go away for short weekends we put up the sun canopy, and longer trips we put up the full awning.

Yes its expensive, but we love it, the kids (6,9) love it, and we're off to France this weekend for 3 weeks and cant wait.

speedyman

1,588 posts

247 months

Tuesday 1st August 2023
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I've had two folding campers, first was a Conway cruiser, other a Countryman and towing is easy due to the low profile of the trailer. Towed to the south of France three times, Pennine bought out Conway a few years back, I would go for a Pennine over an Opus.

Sway

31,304 posts

207 months

Tuesday 1st August 2023
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We're away at the moment in our Conway Continental.



15 minutes after arriving the kettle was on. 30 minutes later a cuppa had been consumed and the awning up.

I then go for a walk with Merlin while the missus 'nests'.

Woke up this morning to a herd of deer walking past.


XJ75

Original Poster:

493 posts

153 months

Monday 18th September 2023
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Just back from a weekend in an Opus rented via Camplify (thanks for the suggestion).

It was money well spent because we have decided it's not for us. I can definitely see the appeal of the Opus, the beds were comfy, the sofa area was a nice space and the creature comforts were nice (sink, oven, fridge etc.).

The key thing we didn't like was that as a family of four it felt very cramped. We had the sun canopy rather than the awning, and I'm sure if we had the awning it would have been a nice bit of extra usable space, but I felt that we were always on top of each other. Perhaps if we had gone at the height of summer it would have been better because we would have been outside more.

I think we are going to throw some money at our camping setup to make it a bit more comfortable.

ETA: we also found the storage was very limited (again that wouldn't have been so bad if we had the awning).

Sway

31,304 posts

207 months

Monday 18th September 2023
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Might be worth trying a Pennine via rental... A lot of things you raise are very different in one (especially a pathfinder) I'm comparison to an Opus.

But yes, awning makes an immense difference to usable space!