RE: Team Sky Eura Mobil Activa 820HS: Spotted

RE: Team Sky Eura Mobil Activa 820HS: Spotted

Saturday 2nd June 2018

Team Sky Eura Mobil Activa 820HS: Spotted

A fan of cycling? You could blend right in with this ex-Team Sky motorhome



Driving and camping is not everyone's cup of tea when it comes to going on holiday. The faff of packing a car up, driving to a campsite, then the erection of a tent and the hassle of figuring out what to do for dinner. Then you have to take it down again, possibly after a sleepless night because people kept tripping over your tent pegs on their way to the loo. And you may have to repeat this process multiple times if you are touring around. So, why not combine the tent and your transport? Wouldn't that be a good idea? Voila, you have yourself a motorhome.

Now, there are motorhomes and there are motorhomes. In America, you can have hulking great lorries converted into something rivalling a block of flats. But, our smaller roads will struggle with this, so we mostly stick to converted vans. Which is why the front of this looks like a Fiat Ducato. It uses the same 3.0-litre 157bhp four-cylinder diesel engine, too.


Some of you may have also noticed the Sky livery all over the exterior of the van, which should give you a good clue as to who one of this rig's last two owners was. Yep, this van was used by Team Sky between 2012 to 2014 for various cycling events and housed many of their athletes as they toured across Europe - probably the reason why the it has covered over 100,000 miles.

Now, even if you are not a fan of Team Sky, this motorhome is great for enthusiastic cyclists. You've got a load carrier at the back for various bikes, washroom with separate shower and laminate flooring throughout to cope with the mud. There's also a self-seeking satellite dish for outside broadcasts, a fully fitted kitchen and a flat screen T.V - not necessarily hooked up to a certain premium television service.


This motorhome is fully air-conditioned should you wish to escape the heat (and the bugs), and you've even got solar panels on the roof to help charge the three leisure batteries and, therefore, keep the fridge running. You can't have your beers getting warm now, can you?

Yes, £49,995 is a lot of money to spend, but, when faced with the trauma of arguments with other half over who's feeding the tent poles through which holes, or the stress of trying to get your children to help fold up a groundsheet rather than be on their phones, the Eura Mobil Activa starts to make sense. Couple that with the ability to sneak into the VIP areas at major cycling tournaments and you could be onto a winner. Unless Sky insists you remove the livery...


See the full ad here.

SPECIFICATION: EURA MOBIL ACTIVA 820HS
Engine: 2999cc, four-cylinder, turbocharged
Transmission: six-speed manual, front-wheel drive
Power (hp): 160hp @ 3,500rpm
Torque (lb ft): 295lb ft @ 1,700rpm
MPG: 20 mpg on a cruise
CO2: 147 g/km CO2
First registered: 2009
Recorded mileage: 101,844miles
Price new: £67,000 without options
Yours for: £49,995

Author
Discussion

je777

Original Poster:

341 posts

104 months

Saturday 2nd June 2018
quotequote all
I'd have a good check under any seat cushions, etc. before taking it abroad - you don't know what 'marginal gains' products might have slipped down through any cracks.

Craikeybaby

10,411 posts

225 months

Saturday 2nd June 2018
quotequote all
You beat me to it!

oilit

2,626 posts

178 months

Saturday 2nd June 2018
quotequote all
bet it was used for the maintenance crew rather than those 'special medics'

Bencolem

1,017 posts

239 months

Saturday 2nd June 2018
quotequote all
Retains 75% of its value after 9 years and 100,000 miles? Wow.

snake_oil

2,039 posts

75 months

Saturday 2nd June 2018
quotequote all
Bencolem said:
Retains 75% of its value after 9 years and 100,000 miles? Wow.
Amazing what a paint job will do. Then again, it's not sold yet... smile

snake_oil

2,039 posts

75 months

Saturday 2nd June 2018
quotequote all

Toaster

2,939 posts

193 months

Saturday 2nd June 2018
quotequote all
Bencolem said:
Retains 75% of its value after 9 years and 100,000 miles? Wow.
Its a high end motor home

https://www.outandaboutlive.co.uk/motorhomes/for-s... This is a Hymer new cost would be around £58K 9 years old and the asking price is £45K

These vans can do stella miles and if well maintained can be good value

Of course with all things there is the asking price and the selling price.

je777

Original Poster:

341 posts

104 months

Saturday 2nd June 2018
quotequote all
Toaster said:
Bencolem said:
Retains 75% of its value after 9 years and 100,000 miles? Wow.
Its a high end motor home

https://www.outandaboutlive.co.uk/motorhomes/for-s... This is a Hymer new cost would be around £58K 9 years old and the asking price is £45K

These vans can do stella miles and if well maintained can be good value

Of course with all things there is the asking price and the selling price.
'stella miles' - is this what the kids are calling drink-driving these days?

Toaster

2,939 posts

193 months

Saturday 2nd June 2018
quotequote all
je777 said:
'stella miles' - is this what the kids are calling drink-driving these days?
biggrin probably

Woody John

759 posts

73 months

Saturday 2nd June 2018
quotequote all
Take that stty branding off and maybe it will sell. Has not been used in years judging by the rider list on the doors.


s3fella

10,524 posts

187 months

Saturday 2nd June 2018
quotequote all
Surely you’d have to be on a performance enhancing substance to drop 50k on such a a thing with 101k miles on it?

Helicopter123

8,831 posts

156 months

Saturday 2nd June 2018
quotequote all
Don't know much about cycling, or Team Sky, but weren't they the ones caught using performance enhancing drugs?

B17NNS

18,506 posts

247 months

Saturday 2nd June 2018
quotequote all
Bencolem said:
Retains 75% of its value after 9 years and 100,000 miles? Wow.
That was my first thought.

anonymous-user

54 months

Saturday 2nd June 2018
quotequote all
If I were deciding whether or not to buy I'd have to sleep on it.

poing

8,743 posts

200 months

Saturday 2nd June 2018
quotequote all
Bencolem said:
Retains 75% of its value after 9 years and 100,000 miles? Wow.
I thought the same but then spotted £67k without options. What would we estimate though, £100k? So still about 50% potentially.

Toaster

2,939 posts

193 months

Saturday 2nd June 2018
quotequote all
Helicopter123 said:
Don't know much about cycling, or Team Sky, but weren't they the ones caught using performance enhancing drugs?
Maybe Maybe not....

TUS373

4,506 posts

281 months

Saturday 2nd June 2018
quotequote all
I think this should be in the Shed column. Come on..£50k! There are much nicer appointed newer motorhomes out there for similar money. That quite frankly is hideous inside and probably rather more used and worn than whats on the market. You can stick the fact that is Sky and cycling. Who is that sentimental to spend money for that provenance? I dont get it.

je777

Original Poster:

341 posts

104 months

Sunday 3rd June 2018
quotequote all
Toaster said:
Helicopter123 said:
Don't know much about cycling, or Team Sky, but weren't they the ones caught using performance enhancing drugs?
Maybe Maybe not....
Wiggins definitely was - he's admitted that - it's just a question of whether or not this was legal. This TUE (therapeutic use exemption) didn't conform to WADA's rules of the time, but the (shonky as hell) UCI doctor of the time signed off on them (three times - only before grand tours).

There are many other PEDs that can - and undoubtedly are - used legally, e.g. tramadol (opioid painkiller that Sky are widely said to use) and corticosteroids (what Wiggins had) if used out of competition.

Froome' salbutamol is also legal up to a certain dosage - he was way over that, so now his lawyers are working on this. (Remarkable comeback of his at the Giro d'Italia...)

jeremyh1

1,358 posts

127 months

Sunday 3rd June 2018
quotequote all
je777 said:
I'd have a good check under any seat cushions, etc. before taking it abroad - you don't know what 'marginal gains' products might have slipped down through any cracks.
Ha ha I am a massive cycling fan and when I did my sports course at college 35 years ago I did a project on drugs in sport in the early days of drug testing .So I have always been very interested in the subject

You can safely say there would no drugs left on this bus as the rule was always never to carry them in any vehicles registered to the team Only the doctor carried them and after the 1998 festina affair People that had no relation to the team started to haul them

Smiler.

11,752 posts

230 months

Sunday 3rd June 2018
quotequote all
160 HP? Is that all? And FWD. I have no idea. Those brown seats though.