VW Motor Home Campers

How the motorhome changed gear and drove up cool street

Motorhome models now offer a huge range of options from the calssic or new model VW Motorhome camper to huge custom built American RV’s

Emma Smith of the Sunday Times takes you through the choices, and find out what the celebs are buying.

August 13, 2006

Even caravanners once derided them. But now rock stars are climbing aboard

By Emma Smith of The Sunday Times
Across the Atlantic motorhomes have long enjoyed an adventurous rock’n’roll image. Giant RVs or Winnebagos (even the names sound cool) bring to mind heady summer road trips across rugged country and the unrestricted freedom of a wide-open highway.

In Britain the motorhome was traditionally about as glam as Bognor, with all the wild pioneering spirit of Mary Whitehouse. Our motorhomes were cheap, cramped and naff. Something even caravanners could look down on.

But now revamped modern vehicles are attracting a new generation of “cashmere campers” who crave the independence and flexibility of the gypsy lifestyle but with the luxury and style of a five-star designer hotel.

Sales of motorhomes have shot up by more than 50% in the past five years as these thirtysomething campers, disenchanted with package holidays and nostalgic for the traditional family breaks of their childhood, are overturning the image of cheap grin-and-bear-it hole-in-the-ground-toilet camping holidays.

Gone are the 1970s Formica worktops, floral curtains and plywood bunk beds. In their place are soft, sprawling sofas, muted lighting, tasteful, understated decor and king-size beds. There’s no more huddling round a crackly portable telly. Instead you can sit back and watch DVDs on the latest flat-screen television.

Standard Life bank surveyed 2,000 people and found that one in four would consider buying, or already own, a motorhome and only about one in five still regard motorhomes as cramped and uncomfortable.

“Motorhomes are increasingly popular among people in their thirties and early forties who want to experience the outdoor life — but in style,” says Ashley Ramsay, a Standard Life spokesman.

So what gave the motorhome its new mojo? One factor is hippie festivals such as Glastonbury that have become as much a part of “the season” as Ascot and Glyndebourne. Catering wagons at the festival sell Covent Garden soups, organic ostrich burgers and chilled Pimm’s and the discerning audiences aren’t prepared to put up with camping in a sea of mud.

Kate Moss, supermodel and trendsetter, took an Infinity motorhome to Glastonbury in 2004 and, as everything Moss touches turns to cool, it wasn’t long before aspirational young couples were championing the motorhome as their ticket to hassle-free camping.

Other celebrity converts include the actor Will Smith, musicians Lenny Kravitz and Robbie Williams, racing driver Jenson Button, foodies Jamie and Jools Oliver with their souped-up 1960s VW Camper, and Jay Kay, lead singer with Jamiroquai, who has just bought a 3 litre turbodiesel Knaus C-Liner with alloy wheels, futuristic metallic bodywork, ambient lighting and leather armchairs, worth £60,000.

“We have been very lucky,” says John de Mierre of the Motorhome Information Service (MIS), which represents the motorhome industry in Britain. “Celebrity owners have really given us an image boost and shown that motorhomes can be sexy and modern. But it’s also part of a wider trend for independent travel. People want the flexibility to create their own holidays, and with a motorhome you have a place you can call yours, but you can still go to a different place every year.”

The Camping and Caravanning Club, which has more than 400,000 members, says membership has increased by 10% year on year, thanks in part to a growing number of motorhomers.

As ever, the UK is following in the triple-axle tyre tracks of America, where RVs (recreational vehicles — Winnebago is a trademark) have expanded in size even more extravagantly than the waistlines of their middle-aged occupants.

Wealthy Americans are spending huge sums on giant driveable palaces where owners can relax on their reclining leather chairs, sip an ice-cold beer from the fully stocked minibar, watch the latest films on their built-in home cinema system and round off the evening with a dip in the Jacuzzi and a turn on their miniature dance floor.

Some cost as much as £500,000 and stretch to more than 32ft long with slide-out panels to add extra width. The $850,000 (£450,000) Terra Wind can even be driven through water and claims to be “the first amphibious luxury motorhome”.

“Upmarket camping has really taken off in the States,” says Ronnie Anderson of Anderson Mobile Estates, a Florida-based company specialising in very expensive custom-built RVs. “There are even campsites with their own shopping malls. People like the camaraderie of camping. It’s an environment where you can get to know your neighbours, even though you might not want to do that at home, well not in the States . . .”

Will Smith, star of Men in Black and Independence Day, recently bought a 75ft-long 200-ton two-storey RV worth $1.8m from Anderson’s company. It comes with its own dance floor, 65in plasma TVs and an automatic window-frosting effect that can be activated at the touch of a button when the star needs more privacy.

The firm is working on a similar model for Robert De Niro, which will include a dining room for 30 guests, 11 plasma televisions, a roll-down cinema screen and a private study. Other celebrity clients have included the rapper Ice Cube and Ben Stiller, star of Starsky & Hutch. “Nicole Richie borrowed one of our vans the other day and Mariah Carey loves them,” says Anderson. “She likes the cosiness and the comfort.”

European motorhomes remain smaller than their American counterparts, with prices starting from about £8,000 for a refurbished “splittie”, the original split-windscreen VW camper, or from £24,000 for a new coach-built motorhome. In an increasingly lucrative market, British suppliers such as Swift and Autosleeper are fighting to stay ahead of German rivals like Knaus and Hymer. Volkswagen recently launched the California (with prices starting at about £34,000), a modern alternative to the camper which lacks the charms of the original but makes up for it in mod-cons.

There are an estimated 131,000 motorhomes currently in use in the UK and annual sales have increased from about 5,000 five years ago to around 11,000.

“I think European manufacturers have now succeeded in making better-looking, sexier motorhomes, offering more comfort and space, but which are still small enough to cope with anything from narrow Cornish country lanes to winding Pennine mountain roads,” says de Mierre. “They’re no longer the poor relation.”

THE BAD OLD DAYS: THREE OF THE DINOSAURS
By Nicholas Rufford

Bedford Dormobile, 1963
Looks like the result of a confused slug mating with a lettuce instead of eating it. With the speed of a milk float and comfort of a park bench this was once the way all camper vans were made. The good old 1960s? I think not

Volkswagen T25, 1983
If holidaying in a plumber’s van was your idea of fun, you probably owned one of these. A brutally utilitarian top-heavy bruiser that smelt of Formica and camping Gaz. More suitable for a ram raid than a road trip

Talbot Highwayman, circa 1988
Those Daisy Duke hotpants aren’t fooling anyone. This motoring monstrosity had all the sex appeal of a toilet seat. Went out with Billy Ray Cyrus and his mullet. And a chocolate brown interior? What was that all about?

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Bus to Campervan Conversion

This is a good guide from someone converting a transit minibus to a camper. No it’s not a VW motorhome camper, but there are some clear pictures showing technique, plans, fitting etc that can  give you inspiration and ideas for your VW motorhome. The layout of any motorhome can be done using Google Sketch Up http://www.vwcampersforever.com/restoring-vw-campers/a-great-guide-to-interior-restoration-of-a-vw-camper

The transit blog can be reached on

http://abusforus.blogspot.com/search?updated-max=2008-06-14T10%3A30%3A00%2B01%3A00&max-results=7

You might also find the costings for each stge a useful guide too.

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VW Motorhomes – the T4

This was the basis of not only the highly popular Westphalia California VW camper van, but of numerous other vw motorhome conversions by a range of companies.

The Volkswagen T4 van, released in 1990, was the first VW transporter without a rear engine. A major departure from earlier configurations, this front-wheel drive model was available in two wheelbase sizes, and the front engine design made a far greater range of special body variants possible. The shape maintained the wedge of the T3 (t25) but in common with much other styling of the time, had a more rounded front end and details.

The engines are transverse mounted with four, five and six cylinders, and the popular TDI diesel engines with direct injection, brought the Transporter’s performance back to a competitive level.

Enthusiasts naturally bemoaned the death of the classic Type 2, but rationally it really was inevitable. The T4 was a tremendous success, and the introduction of its successor was delayed until eventually after 14 years, the T4 ceased production in 2003. This makes it second only to the T1 (the Beetle) for length of production in its home market.

There was one major model change to the T4, in 1994, when the front end was redesigned to allow the six-cylinder VR6 engine to be fitted into the engine bay. The commercial variants, which were not available with the VR6, retained the old look. Following the Type 2’s naming convention, these two versions are called T4a and T4b informally by enthusiasts.

You’ll see how the VW T4 is configured in this earlier post http://vwmotorhomecampers.co.uk/vw-motor-homes/vw-t4-motorhomes

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VW T4 Motorhomes

VW California Motorhome T4

Volkswagen linked up with Westfalia to produce the factory fitted Volkswagen Westfalia range of T4 camper vans. The T4 Volkswagen Westfalia was manufactured only as left hand drive, passenger vehicles.

Similar in specification to the Volkswagen Caravelle, (the passenger carrying rather motorhome version) the Volkswagen Westfalia is a highly developed factory built conversion camper van. There were a number of versions available with rear elevating roofs and side opening roofs.

The VW Westfalia had factory fitted sliding windows, safety belt mounting points, rear passenger heating and door pockets. Westfalia included a tested practical sliding bed/seat with seatbelts with an optional (additional) removable seat which can be fitted in the tracks.

Westphalia VW motorhome conversions also have low profile elevating roofs keeping the T4 under 2 metres in height. The moulded vehicle lining is easy to wipe clean, and with steel framed storage units and twin swivel cab seats these are sought after motorhomes.

The diesel option is more expensive but the fuel economy of 30-40mpg makes this worthwhile

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