Living with a van

Author
Discussion

V8mate

Original Poster:

45,899 posts

196 months

Thursday 6th August 2015
quotequote all
(with, not in!)

I've always wanted a van. Since before I could drive. I've now reached the age where I'm old enough and ugly enough to do whatever I want and I want to 'realise the dream' and add a van to the domestic fleet. Just because.

I'm a bit of a knowledge monkey, so have done tonnes of research, but there's one thing I don't 'get': do commercial vehicles have a different kind of bhp to cars? rotate

My daily driver, a little 1 Series BMW, has 163bhp. And that feels like 'enough'. It's no racing car, but it'll grab a gap in traffic and hustle along with the crowd.

And then I look at vans. 75bhp. 90bhp. 115bhp.

Chatting to a CV salesman at Citroen whilst looking at a 125bhp LWB Dispatch, he described it as having "too much power". Really? Sales hyperbole aside, the power outputs of vans seem to be a world away from contemporary cars, so how do they actually even move? biggrin

So, ye men of van, tell all. Do vans have 'enough' power? Are car drivers spoiled or do you really all need 180+ bhp too?

markiii

3,847 posts

201 months

Thursday 6th August 2015
quotequote all
as most vans are diesel have you compared the torque?

V8mate

Original Poster:

45,899 posts

196 months

Thursday 6th August 2015
quotequote all
120d - 340Nm at 2000 rpm

Dispatch 125 - 320Nm at 2000 rpm

LouD86

3,285 posts

160 months

Thursday 6th August 2015
quotequote all
For most, a van is a tool. Its not something to drive with a fun manner. The 126 unit in the Citroen is a good unit, plenty of poke for a van, but won't set the world on fire. They genuinely do have good torque figures though. If your worried about that BHP number, look at the Transit 155, Transporter 180 etc

MadMullah

5,289 posts

200 months

Friday 7th August 2015
quotequote all
LouD86 said:
For most, a van is a tool. Its not something to drive with a fun manner.
This.

I've been driving a sprinter for the last month or so as a self employed courier

you realise that stepping lightly on the pedal is a benefit not just to the engine but to your pocket too.

unless your going to be regularly shifting heavy weights then go for a more powerful option otherwise look at it financially because that's why your getting it. in the 7 or so weeks i've done only once or twice has my van been loaded with its maximum weight. mostly its due to its size that i'm getting hired. Once it was for a metal bar 4m long but it was 1cm by 2cm. that's it.

this being pistonheads its nice to have a van you'll enjoy driving etc but think with the pocket not the heart.

cheddar

4,637 posts

181 months

Friday 7th August 2015
quotequote all
V8mate said:
I'm a bit of a knowledge monkey, so have done tonnes of research, but there's one thing I don't 'get': do commercial vehicles have a different kind of bhp to cars? rotate
scratchchin

VW Caddy Maxi, 170bhp, 260lbft

VW T5, 180bhp, 300lbft

Transit 150bhp

MB Vito/Sprinter 188bhp, 330lbft

Peugeot Expert 160bhp

Peugeot Boxer 180bhp

Citroen Despatch 125bhp

Citroen Relay 155bhp

Iveco Daily 205bhp

Vauxhall Vivaro 140bhp

Fiat Ducato 180bhp





Edited by cheddar on Saturday 8th August 00:20

martin mrt

3,831 posts

208 months

Saturday 8th August 2015
quotequote all
I run a VW T5 Transporter daily, infact it's currently my only vehicle

It's a 2.5 130bhp that's been remapped to around 175bhp

More than enough power in what it is

Had one previously and ran it alongside a 335d Tourer, I sold the 335 as it was never used.

Slushbox

1,484 posts

112 months

Saturday 8th August 2015
quotequote all
Vans are horrible. Noisy, bouncy, horse and cart suspension, seats made from cardboard, interiors from Woolworths. Rent one for a week and see if you still want one after that. Or try a Berlingo.

Djtemeka

1,873 posts

199 months

Saturday 8th August 2015
quotequote all
I have a swb vivaro sportive 115bhp. It's the right blend of power and useability. I wouldn't go for less power and don't need more power. 180bhp would be fun though 😆

grumpy52

5,717 posts

173 months

Saturday 8th August 2015
quotequote all
If you are tall try to get one without a bulkhead , more leg room .
Too much power will be a pain in the arris if its lightly loaded and around town ,we had a couple of test vehicles that had over 250bhp , lovely on open motorways but a right pain in town .Modern turbo engines don't have much grunt very low down like the old school plodders , so the power band tends to be very narrow , you get the power then a couple of seconds later you need another gear, gets to be tiring when in traffic .

hairyben

8,516 posts

190 months

Saturday 8th August 2015
quotequote all
Most vans are bought as tools. no requirement for anything more than "sufficient" power/luxurys etc.

Even the private buyers are tight most of the time, there's very few willing to spend a bit more for some comfort even when they're earning lots. you think more would want auto gearboxes etc but no.

I got the vito 120 (200bhp V6 TDI) which at 8 secs to 60 was the worlds fastest production van... fun but it's pretty thirsty. high teens mpg round town and less still in bad traffic.

Johnnytheboy

24,498 posts

193 months

Saturday 8th August 2015
quotequote all
The pay at my place is shocking but my manager loves me, so lets me buy what I want within reason.

I have a 140hp Transit as a delivery van and a 140hp Caddy as a run round.

The difference between having a vehicle that strains to overtake and one that can do it fairly easily is the difference between my hating my job and liking it, given that I spend a lot of time on rural roads.

Bearing mind that - certainly when empty - vans are quite light and tend to be quite hard sprung, so can be surprisingly fun to drive for their bhp if you buy the right one.

daemon

36,736 posts

204 months

Saturday 8th August 2015
quotequote all
V8mate said:
(with, not in!)

I've always wanted a van. Since before I could drive. I've now reached the age where I'm old enough and ugly enough to do whatever I want and I want to 'realise the dream' and add a van to the domestic fleet. Just because.

I'm a bit of a knowledge monkey, so have done tonnes of research, but there's one thing I don't 'get': do commercial vehicles have a different kind of bhp to cars? rotate

My daily driver, a little 1 Series BMW, has 163bhp. And that feels like 'enough'. It's no racing car, but it'll grab a gap in traffic and hustle along with the crowd.

And then I look at vans. 75bhp. 90bhp. 115bhp.

Chatting to a CV salesman at Citroen whilst looking at a 125bhp LWB Dispatch, he described it as having "too much power". Really? Sales hyperbole aside, the power outputs of vans seem to be a world away from contemporary cars, so how do they actually even move? biggrin

So, ye men of van, tell all. Do vans have 'enough' power? Are car drivers spoiled or do you really all need 180+ bhp too?
You would have liked my 2.8 VR6 Caddy then.....





2.8i VR6, approx 180BHP, K&N Induction Kit, flipped rear axle, coilovers, VR6 Golf leather seats, Polo dash, G60 steel wheels....

daemon

36,736 posts

204 months

Saturday 8th August 2015
quotequote all
I'd have thought a newer model Caddy diesel with a remap should be around 180BHP?

crossy67

1,570 posts

186 months

Saturday 8th August 2015
quotequote all
My van's my car. It's a T5 1.9tdi 105bhp with a sensible remap up to iro 140bhp. The difference is astounding, it now pulls to the red line making overtaking much easier. Before the remap it was all over by 3000rpm.

Van's tend to have a lot of weight over the back compared to the front, I find mine spins the wheels very easily.

Hooli

32,278 posts

207 months

Monday 10th August 2015
quotequote all
Comedy grip levels is why vans have no power. We have a boggo standard 59 plate Caddy Maxi & if the roads are even damp the traction control spends it's life stopping you moving & flashing on the dash.

Makes me chuckle it has TC & manual windows.

It's great for us though, we're restoring our cottage & the amount of building materials it's carried so far has been very helpful.

caelite

4,282 posts

119 months

Tuesday 11th August 2015
quotequote all
Hooli said:
Comedy grip levels is why vans have no power. We have a boggo standard 59 plate Caddy Maxi & if the roads are even damp the traction control spends it's life stopping you moving & flashing on the dash.

Makes me chuckle it has TC & manual windows.

It's great for us though, we're restoring our cottage & the amount of building materials it's carried so far has been very helpful.
The lads at work used to pop the fuse out that works the ABS for... reasons.

Djtemeka

1,873 posts

199 months

Tuesday 11th August 2015
quotequote all
My Vivaro has great levels of traction. The old one was great too. I've never skidded or seen the traction light come on until it snowed.

mad4amanda

2,410 posts

171 months

Tuesday 11th August 2015
quotequote all
I have been considering a van something like a vivaro for domestic duties involving bikes and go karts and a bit of camping.
What are the speed limits though for such vehicles is it easy to get done just by driving like you would a car?
I had a galaxy when they first came out and it was brilliant for family stuff bikes went inside upright and karts fitted in the back and so on but now good ones seam rarer than rocking horse droppings and the later shape just are not big enough to do what the old ones did?
i do like the look of the vws but am not going to pay the premium they demand.

Djtemeka

1,873 posts

199 months

Tuesday 11th August 2015
quotequote all
As far as I'm aware, the swb van is the same speeds as a car but you would need to double check that. The vw is priced more because it is a better vehicle. The Vivaro is a great drive though. I think its reliability lets it down a bit.