RE: VW Caddy: PH Fleet

Saturday 25th August 2018

VW Caddy: PH Fleet

Our van's responsibilities have expanded from Sunday Service wagon to all-round load-lugger



I'm currently renovating my 350-year old cottage, so I've spent a fair bit of time in KX67 XPS recently for trips to Wickes, Notcutts and doing proper van stuff. The 3,200 litre capacity has been well used; packed with everything from a rotavator to a full interior for my Clio, along with bikes and furniture. The only thing it hasn't been able to move was a set of scaffolding - perhaps my expectations were a bit much although the bulkhead panels are removable so there was a chance it was going to make it, but no such luck.

Other than not having quite enough leg room (I'm yet to find a van that does) it has been an absolute dream. Volkswagen are very good at making their commercial vehicles drive just like your family wagon. In another life I used to drive a lot of pick ups and the Amarok (pictured further down) was fantastic, a real cut above the rest. Not just for the way it handled, but down to the premium interior and even the gear change, with the latter being like stirring a cauldron of potion in a Nissan Navara. It's every bit the same for the Caddy and if it weren't for the fuel sloshing around in the back when it's empty, you could easily forget you're in a van.

Click here to view the rest of the PH Fleet


Fully laden the 150hp 2.0TDI still has good poke and will happily return 50mpg on a long run. I foolishly tried to be sensible and recently bought a hateful Skoda Fabia 1.6TDI with 105hp. It goes without saying the van is better to drive in every respect, from cornering to the infotainment and pulling up faster on the brakes. Damn, it's even better on fuel too. We've already mentioned the heated seats enough, but they were glorious after a long hack on my mountain bike at Afan. Other than the harder wearing plastics and higher seating position, you could be forgiven if you were put into the cockpit blindfolded and thought you were in a Golf with the comfy seats, Apple CarPlay, decent speakers and a steering wheel (probably from a Golf) covered in buttons. Not your average van affair.

On the topic of being blindfolded, some numpty managed to smash the mirror glass while the Caddy was parked outside my house. Naturally when there's a village fete going on, all sensible parking consideration goes out the window, so it was inevitable with some other muppet parking opposite the van leaving a narrow space to get through. Luckily for me, my girlfriend's candle obsession finally paid off and I was able to improvise with a chrome-finished candle lid as a mirror for the journey to Bicester for our Sunday Service at the Classic and Sportscar Show the next day. Thanks Pecksniff's. We've previously commented we would have preferred a more original rear wing door configuration, but the one-piece tailgate was very handy for us to sit at the back and enjoy the air display with some shade.


So I suppose my only real frustration is not being able to take it to my local tip, as a panel van is deemed to be taking commercial waste. You can get a local resident permit, but it has to be the only vehicle in your household. You could probably get away with it in a Kombi, plus the removable rear seats may come in handy too. All in all some top vanning from me over the last couple of months and we've still got a handful of Sunday Services left to go before the year is out, so we'll see a few of you soon!


Car: Volkswagen Caddy Highline 2.0 TDI 150ps
On fleet since: January 2018
Mileage: 2,633 (delivered on 120)
List price new: £21,330 (As tested £26,629 comprised of £504 for deep black pearlescent paint with Titanium black upholstery, £600 for Winter pack including headlight washers, heated washer jets, washer fluid level indicator, heated driver's and front passenger seats and electric auxiliary air heater, £252 for rear parking sensors with rear view camera, £78 for lumbar support for driver and front passenger seats, £144 for high beam assist, £114 for electrically foldable and adjustable heated mirrors and £150 for App-connect).
Last month at a glance: Our new Sunday Service steed slots into service superbly!
Previous reports:
PH in a van!
Sunday Service duties






Author
Discussion

Nerdherder

Original Poster:

1,773 posts

97 months

Saturday 25th August 2018
quotequote all
Having a hauler is so nice. A moving van would be my weapon of choice if I needed something for haulage only.

Edited by Nerdherder on Saturday 25th August 13:38

JimbobVFR

2,682 posts

144 months

Saturday 25th August 2018
quotequote all
Impressively low mileage since January.

sutts

897 posts

148 months

Saturday 25th August 2018
quotequote all
I used to enjoy the Caddy I had supplied for work for a few years. Spec was hilariously basic:

Manually operated windows
No internal adjuster for door mirrors
No glove box lid
No tacho or temperature gauge
Unpainted bumpers
Steelies

It have air-con and a radio though!

Great for its intended role:

Child catcher


Don’t panic, not really:



Nerdherder

Original Poster:

1,773 posts

97 months

Saturday 25th August 2018
quotequote all
sutts said:
Great for its intended role: Child catcher
Very good use of a German product.

406dogvan

5,326 posts

265 months

Sunday 26th August 2018
quotequote all
sutts said:
I used to enjoy the Caddy I had supplied for work for a few years. Spec was hilariously basic:

Manually operated windows
No internal adjuster for door mirrors
No glove box lid
No tacho or temperature gauge
Unpainted bumpers
Steelies

It have air-con and a radio though!
Weird spec indeed - tho I'd argue that no-one died because of manual mirrors - or "exercise" windows - ESPECIALLY in a van (there's an argument for power windows when you have dogs or kids in the back of a car - that's really about it tho)

No-one really needs a tacho, it's always been something to fill-up the dash - and temperature gauges are long-gone from most car dashboards (replaced by 'you already broke it' warning lights instead!!)

In other news - the Caddy is nice but I believe it starts at TWICE the price of a Transit Courier??
Nowhere near as nice but as a tool it does the same job and companies don't care if you're comfy for the most part - so...

Edited by 406dogvan on Sunday 26th August 01:24

finnian1989

21 posts

149 months

Sunday 26th August 2018
quotequote all
Has anyone else noticed the degredation in editorial content in the last few years on pistonheads?

Even the quality of the articles has fallen with mistakes all over the place.

This is basically an advetorial for VW now, barely disguised!

Does this not bother anyone?

Gav10

12 posts

100 months

Sunday 26th August 2018
quotequote all



Johnnytheboy

24,498 posts

186 months

Sunday 26th August 2018
quotequote all
On my third at work since 2005. Now on the 140 bhp one.

Great little vans.

MJK 24

5,648 posts

236 months

Sunday 26th August 2018
quotequote all
406dogvan said:
sutts said:
I used to enjoy the Caddy I had supplied for work for a few years. Spec was hilariously basic:

Manually operated windows
No internal adjuster for door mirrors
No glove box lid
No tacho or temperature gauge
Unpainted bumpers
Steelies

It have air-con and a radio though!
Weird spec indeed - tho I'd argue that no-one died because of manual mirrors - or "exercise" windows - ESPECIALLY in a van (there's an argument for power windows when you have dogs or kids in the back of a car - that's really about it tho)

No-one really needs a tacho, it's always been something to fill-up the dash - and temperature gauges are long-gone from most car dashboards (replaced by 'you already broke it' warning lights instead!!)

In other news - the Caddy is nice but I believe it starts at TWICE the price of a Transit Courier??
Nowhere near as nice but as a tool it does the same job and companies don't care if you're comfy for the most part - so...

Edited by 406dogvan on Sunday 26th August 01:24
Transit Courier is far smaller.

Transit Connect is the rival to the Caddy. Compare apples with apples!

loose cannon

6,030 posts

241 months

Monday 27th August 2018
quotequote all
The good thing with modded caddy’s is that you
Get a good warning that the local drug dealer
Or career thief is approaching nearby

Gav10

12 posts

100 months

Monday 27th August 2018
quotequote all
The black one in the above post is mine! And I’m neither!!

bristolracer

5,540 posts

149 months

Monday 27th August 2018
quotequote all
26k for a small van?
They saw you coming

DennisTheMenace

15,603 posts

268 months

Tuesday 4th September 2018
quotequote all
I’m still confused as to how everyone says this van drives in a car like fashion and has good handling.

Come on down to Dorset and I will take you for a spin in my 2017 150bhp caddy. It’s a clown van at best for driving. On the roads down here you will need a sick bag.

Alucidnation

16,810 posts

170 months

Tuesday 4th September 2018
quotequote all
We’ve had a few caddys over the last few years in the fleet and the quality has been dropping, and the prices increasing.

They are all the 150 variant and are good on fuel.

For some reason the latest ones come with xl rated tyres and the ride is hard but still wallows around, so are not comfortable in the slightest.

Unfortunately, there are no other manufacturers offering decent power outputs and a selection of options so the choices are limited somewhat.

Don’t forget, the above is more than likely a paid for review and is bound to be skewed in the vans favour.

DennisTheMenace

15,603 posts

268 months

Tuesday 4th September 2018
quotequote all
Alucidnation said:
We’ve had a few caddys over the last few years in the fleet and the quality has been dropping, and the prices increasing.

They are all the 150 variant and are good on fuel.

For some reason the latest ones come with xl rated tyres and the ride is hard but still wallows around, so are not comfortable in the slightest.

Unfortunately, there are no other manufacturers offering decent power outputs and a selection of options so the choices are limited somewhat.

Don’t forget, the above is more than likely a paid for review and is bound to be skewed in the vans favour.
I will have to check and see if mine are XL rated. IIRC they are Bridgestone Turanza’s but the normal and not XL.

My van has the factory lowering option. But the whole thing feels incredibly under damped and springy. And of course VW say nothing’s wrong.

I suppose when you buy a 14/15 year old design vehicle, what can you expect!