GORV - Digital Magazine Issue #26 | Page 17

RV REVIEW REVIEWED IN THE GLASSHOUSE MOUNTAINS! “ THE FRV CHASSIS IS ANYTHING BUT 1970s-ERA FARE ” In 2018, Coromal Caravans was acquired by Apollo, the company behind one of the largest RV rental fleets in the southern hemisphere, not to mention Winnebago Australia and Adria, and has since invested in a program of technical modernisation for the brand. When I arrived at Apollo’s sprawling Northgate, Qld, manufacturing headquarters, a company Ford Ranger was waiting, already hitched to an Element 553 Evolution RTV (Rural Terrain Vehicle). The Glasshouse Mountains would be my testing ground, its gravel, corrugated logging trails the perfect place to put it through its paces. BUILDING THE ELEMENT The Ranger hauled the Coromal on the highway as though it wasn’t there, and the van behaved itself at all times. I experienced no sway or porpoising on the towbar. At lower speeds, on the tracks in the mountains, it was a similar story. As standard, it’s fitted with the Coromal- designed seven-leaf wishbone suspension that the company has been using since the 1970s. The so-called FRV chassis, though, is anything but 70s-era fare. Made of 550-grade high-tensile steel, each section has been CNC-cut and folded, and secured together using industrial-strength huck rivets. The entire structure contains no welds. The FRV chassis, Coromal says, is about 130kg lighter than a comparable RHS caravan chassis. The lightening holes of the chassis’ cross members serve as attachment points for gas and water lines, etc., though I felt that some of the plastic components, i.e., the dump valves on the water tanks, could be better protected. / 17