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Saturday 9 November 2013

Videos of Aires - and Eurotunnel.

Here is a link to the Videos I posted on Youtube earlier this year – www.youtube.com/user/keithchesterfield

Most of the clips relate to the Aires we visited in June and July but there are also videos of our journey through the Eurotunnel terminals at Folkestone and Coquelles.

The picture quality of the Youtube clips is very poor compared to the original videos.


Definition of the Payload of a Motorhome –

An optimistic figure the manufacturers hide away in the small print section of the Advertising literature and the figure quoted is usually somewhere between wishful thinking and a Hans Christian Anderson fantasy world.

The literature for the Reférénce gives a figure of 3075 kg for the un-laden weight and a Gross vehicle weight of 3500 kg - which in theory gives 425 kg of payload.

But what they don't calculate, and put in the 'blurb' that we rely on, is the Mass in Running Order (MRO) which includes the un-laden vehicle at 3075 kg plus 75kg to cover the weight of the driver, plus 90 per cent full water and fuel tanks and the engine coolants.

This now reduces the original figure of 425 kg payload dramatically.

After having the MH weighed at two different weigh-bridges the payload quoted by Pilote and re-iterated by the Dealers of 425 kilos (66 stones) seems wildly optimistic.

With the regulation quota of water, fuel, gas bottles, solar panel, spare wheel, one driver and no other extras fitted there is only 160 kilos (25 stones) of payload remaining.

Add a my co-pilot/relief driver and our dog and that reduces to 70 kilos (11 stones) and is much less than the quoted figure in the Brochure which should, in theory, have left around 355 kilos – not the diminutive 'real' figure we actually have.

When we have put on board food, clothes, leisure table and chairs, TV and aerial, EHU cables, water hoses and other essential items there will be very little spare capacity before being overloaded.

As the vehicle has five seat belts for the driver and passengers it seems highly likely that the MH will be well over the 3500 kilos weight limit allowed when at full carrying capacity.

Three extra adults would add at least 210 kilos, children about half that, to the weight carried and would almost certainly be overweight.

I'm not too worried about the payload being so small on my Pilote but anyone else thinking of buying one of this model would be well advised to check what is, or isn't, the capacity before purchasing.

MMM magazine possibly sent all of the families out on the long term test in an over loaded, and therefore illegal, vehicle.

Any feed back about my interpretation of the Pilote payload calculations welcomed.


Sunday 3 November 2013

Irritating minor points!


A few points that seem to indicate that Motorhome designers never actually take the completed vehicle out for a day or two to try and see if everything in, and fitted to the MH, is as practical as it should be.

There seem to be some items that really should in my opinion be fitted as standard (Smoke alarm, Carbon Monoxide alarm and fire extinguisher) but none of these safety features were with the MH when we took delivery – they are fitted now!

Did MMM send the 'long test' families away on holidays without any of the three items or have they taken them out of the vehicle after the tests?

The toilet roll holder was behind the toilet and almost impossible to reach, when perched on the seat, unless you're extremely supple - i.e. - contortionist!

The toilet seat wouldn't lift up and stay up because it was stopped from getting beyond the vertical by the toilet roll on the holder.

The light switches just inside the habitation door were the 'wrong' way up but all other switches in the MH were the correct way.

The height given by Pilote in their literature is 2.85m – yes, it is from the top of the rear of the MH but the roof lights add another 5cms giving a total of 2.90m – it may not be a lot of extra height but it's still something to be aware of.

Anything else fitted to the roof, for example TV aerial, will need checking for extra height.

One of the 'testers' mentioned the difficulty with positioning the MH when dropping off waste water and to stop having a similar problem I've added a plastic pipe underneath from the waste water outlet to the side of water release handle and clipped it in place.

This now allows much more flexibility when parking to drop off waste water.

On the dashboard there are brushed aluminium trimmings which reflect in the windscreen causing a 'U' shaped and two 'V' shape lines more or less in the driver and passenger eye lines and are an irritation when driving – they've been covered with black Electricians tape.

The Remis blinds rattle on each cab door and seem to have no obvious way of stopping them make a noise.

The folding shower doors are secured by a thin plastic strap that is clipped at each end – this allows the doors to rattle – a piece of sponge wedged between the doors and the wall are a short term solution – a clip or clips will be a longer term answer.

Inside the compartment that houses the battery, fuses and electrical boxes (beneath the seat behind the drivers seat) there is plywood board, about 450 x 400 mm, which should have been secured by clips to other boards to ensure it remained held in place.

But some bright 'spark', either manufacturer or dealer, has run a cable behind the board instead of over it, despite there being a 'cut out' to allow the cable to go over it, and that ensures the board cannot be aligned correctly with the clips and just flaps about noisily.
 
A quick and simple reroute of the cable and the problem noise is sorted out and the board is now movement free.

Some door and cupboard catches were rattling as they were not as well set as they should have been – they are now correctly aligned and do not move about and rattle.

Slowly but surely the minor irritations are being sorted out!



Take delivery

We took delivery of our Pilote Reference P716 LPR on Friday 11th October, after a five hour delay at the Dealers, and despite the following moans and groans about basic and irritating problems catalogued below I'm very pleased with the Pilote.

The MH had been on a long term test with MMM (Motorcaravan Motorhome Monthly) magazine and we bought it with around 6,000 miles on the clock.

It looks the bees knees, drive well, decent 'oomph' in the performance with the 150 engine, very good size cooker and fridge/freezer, the general layout is user friendly and I'm sure we'll learn to really enjoy the MH once the minor, but irritating niggles, are sorted out.