Best Motorhome / Campervan gadget?

Best Motorhome / Campervan gadget?

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Discussion

chappj

Original Poster:

339 posts

151 months

Sunday 25th February
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We will hopefully be taking delivery of an Adria Twin in 3-4 weeks time and need to kit it out with everything!

So what’s been your most useful / wish you’d bought it sooner gadget?

oilrag1

133 posts

150 months

Sunday 25th February
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A passenger who can navigate !

egor110

17,370 posts

211 months

Sunday 25th February
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5 g and a satellite dish .

What Adria model have you got ?

chappj

Original Poster:

339 posts

151 months

Sunday 25th February
quotequote all
egor110 said:
5 g and a satellite dish .

What Adria model have you got ?
Adria Twin Sport 640 SGX

Would you go for Starlink over 5G/Satellite if buying again now? This was on my shortlist (I’ve been struggling to find a good horizontal roof mount for Starlink).

RosscoPCole

3,422 posts

182 months

Sunday 25th February
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If it doesn't already come with it get roof mounted solar panels. We have 2 panels on our VW California and it makes such a difference. It means you can go away to sites without EHU and not worry about when your battery is going to run out.

agent006

12,058 posts

272 months

Sunday 25th February
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Lithium leisure batteries if you're planning to be 'off grid' for any length of time. Not a lot of benefit if you just drive from your house to a full service pitch and back though.

On the cheaper end, a length of pipe to attach to the grey water tank drain. Gives you some leeway getting onto service points as the drain is inevitably in an utterly brainless place on both the motorhome and the service point.

egor110

17,370 posts

211 months

Sunday 25th February
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chappj said:
egor110 said:
5 g and a satellite dish .

What Adria model have you got ?
Adria Twin Sport 640 SGX

Would you go for Starlink over 5G/Satellite if buying again now? This was on my shortlist (I’ve been struggling to find a good horizontal roof mount for Starlink).
I don't actually own a motorhome , i work at a mh dealership.

Good news is we don't get many Adrias back for warranty work.

chappj

Original Poster:

339 posts

151 months

Sunday 25th February
quotequote all
agent006 said:
Lithium leisure batteries if you're planning to be 'off grid' for any length of time. Not a lot of benefit if you just drive from your house to a full service pitch and back though.

On the cheaper end, a length of pipe to attach to the grey water tank drain. Gives you some leeway getting onto service points as the drain is inevitably in an utterly brainless place on both the motorhome and the service point.
We’ve decided to do the first season with the x2 lead acid leisure batteries + 150w solar panel to see how we get on (and spread out cost). My wife would prefer an induction hob over gas, however we need to educate ourselves before going down that path to ensure it’s practical).


Dan_The_Man

1,091 posts

247 months

Sunday 25th February
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We always camp off grid and a 120W Solar panel on the roof was our best addition. Was surprised how quickly charging phones would flatten the battery otherwise.

cptsideways

13,656 posts

260 months

Sunday 25th February
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We have an Adria compact, with Truma combi gas heating. In properly cold weather it'll go through two 13kg propane bottles in a week. Which is expensive at nearly £50 a refill & useless for a week or more away.

I've had refillable gas bottles before but it's nigh impossible to get a refill up here in Scotland.

So have fitted a diesel heater that's plumbed into the existing brilliant heating ducting and a 22l marine fuel tank for enough heating for almost a month and a tenth of the cost to run.




r3g

3,750 posts

32 months

Sunday 25th February
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Can't see the link to it now, but for a first-timer, there's a pack of pipe and tap connections/adapters you can buy which will fit every possible tap size and type you'll find in the UK and the continent to refill your water tanks.

For internet, setting your phone (that has an unlimited data allowance obvs) to a hotspot should suffice for using your laptop or PC. If you're in a marginal signal area then you can either buy a Huawei 4G router and stick your phone SIM in there as these have far superior antennas than a lowly phone. No need for expensive satellite connections.

chappj

Original Poster:

339 posts

151 months

Monday 26th February
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cptsideways said:
We have an Adria compact, with Truma combi gas heating. In properly cold weather it'll go through two 13kg propane bottles in a week. Which is expensive at nearly £50 a refill & useless for a week or more away.

I've had refillable gas bottles before but it's nigh impossible to get a refill up here in Scotland.

So have fitted a diesel heater that's plumbed into the existing brilliant heating ducting and a 22l marine fuel tank for enough heating for almost a month and a tenth of the cost to run.
Luckily for us the van comes with a truma diesel heater as standard. From the sound of your experience that’s going to save us a lot of £££. I think the van has a 90L diesel tank which should hopefully mean we don’t need to think about an auxiliary one.

We very nearly ticked the box for underslung refillable gas but having searched a few forums it seems LPG availability in U.K. petrol stations is becoming increasingly scarce so we’ll just see how we get on as it should only be needed for hob/oven.

GAjon

3,812 posts

221 months

Monday 26th February
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A fold away waste bin and a wind up torch.

valiant

11,437 posts

168 months

Monday 26th February
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Get a Gaslow or similar system. Refillable lpg gas tanks are so much easier (although stations that sell gas at the pump are dwindling). Just makes life that much easier and quicker.

We hired an Adria Twin a while back and was very impressed. It was around three years old and had newly 40k on the clock so had seen a far few hires and it was a solid as a rock inside. No squeaks, nothing loose and no easily scratched materials. A really well put together van.

toon10

6,497 posts

165 months

Monday 26th February
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The most useful thing we bought for our T6 camper was those little hooks that sit on the back of the headrests to hang coats, bags, towels, etc. off.

AlBondigaz

189 posts

75 months

Monday 26th February
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chappj said:
Luckily for us the van comes with a truma diesel heater as standard. From the sound of your experience that’s going to save us a lot of £££. I think the van has a 90L diesel tank which should hopefully mean we don’t need to think about an auxiliary one.

We very nearly ticked the box for underslung refillable gas but having searched a few forums it seems LPG availability in U.K. petrol stations is becoming increasingly scarce so we’ll just see how we get on as it should only be needed for hob/oven.
If your van has diesel heater then I wouldn't bother with refillable gas bottles. A hob uses so little gas your bottles will last for months. I had the Truma diesel heater in my last van - it's brilliant.

The best addition you can make, but you will need deep pockets though, is a self levelling system. Park up, hit the button and about a minute later the van is dead level.

Our current van, bought at a year old, had the Alko HY4 system fitted by the original owner. Not sure I would have paid the the £6500 cost to fit but having had it I wouldn't be without it.

mcelliott

9,013 posts

189 months

Monday 26th February
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We do a lot of off grid camping so a decent outdoor light and portable fire pit are great additions

HarryW

15,288 posts

277 months

Monday 26th February
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Best thing is to live with it standard, bar the things you know you wanted but didn’t come with the standard van as every van is a compromise to a certain extent.
Once you’ve lived with it for a bit, there will be things you wished you had and things you didn’t need but thought you did prior to purchase.
Lots update their vans without knowing what they really need, as opposed to thinking they want it.

EG; big solar is great in summer and if you’re static for a few days. Whereas if you mainly mobile then investing in better alternator charging (B2B) is probably best as it isn’t seasonal.
Saying that I think lithium is a must if your off grid for even a night in winter, however whether that be a modest 100ah ( equivalent to 2x95ah agm’s) or a full 300ah+ you’ll only really know once you start using it.

Same as levelling kit, if you’ve a PVC like me I don’t even bother with carrying levelling ramps! If you’re a big tag axle with a 3 way fridge that must be level then I can see the attraction.

As a minimum, live with it before buying and installing big ticket items, you might find you’ll never need if miss them.

cptsideways

13,656 posts

260 months

Monday 26th February
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One other thing I detest in our van is the poxy three way fridge, what a god damn awful invention that is. Fine if you park up for months but we use our van lots and you forever swearing as one or both of us had forgotten to switch it over. It'll be getting replaced with a 12v compressor fridge when I can find one that fits in the hole (which I've had no luck with yet)

My previous van had two 110ah AGM batteries & solar that had lasted ten years and I never flattened once. That was with a compressor fridge and diesel heater etc

HarryW

15,288 posts

277 months

Monday 26th February
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Re compressor fridges, I have one in the van and it’s great, no need to level or worry about the gas igniting etc. I will say that they do use hab batteries a bit, mines a 90ltr and off grid parked up it will use between 30-45ah/day. That’s a big part of your useable particularly for AGM set ups. Obv if you’re driving it’s using your alternator (good time to turn the temp gauge right down whilst in transit.


Re finding the right size both Thetford and to a lesser extent Dometic do a fair range of 12v compressor fridges.