GORV - Digital Magazine Issue #26 | Page 45

YOUR RVs Three years ago, a new drug saved Ian Sherlock’s life. Without it, I wouldn't be writing this story! Then Cheryl, not to be outdone, had a fight with a roller door that smashed her ankle and hip. They replaced her hip the very next day but it's been a long fight back to nearly normal. Ian has been having a bit of hip trouble as well and, by the time you read this, will have gone in for a new hip, too. When I stayed with them a few years ago, they had a nice house on a 100-acre bush block and towed a big Bushtracker caravan behind their Land Cruiser. But since their health problems, they decided to sell 50 acres and the house, and move into a lifestyle village near Maitland, NSW. They have not stopped travelling and attending Australian Caravan Club musters, though, and so they have bought a you-beaut motorhome with all the bells and whistles and a new car to tow behind it. LOTS OF GRUNT The Iveco chassis can support an all-up weight of seven tonnes but the rig only weights 4.6 tonnes from the factory. A heavy vehicle licence is required to drive it, but both Ian and Cheryl have one. Before they bought a ‘toad’, as the Yanks call a car towed behind a motorhome, they were getting around 13 to 15 litres per 100km, but increases quite a bit when towing their Suzuki Grand Vitara. The engine, driving through an eight-speed automatic transmission, has plenty of power to handle the heavy rig when loaded. The couple tow a Grand Vitara 'toad'. “Is there anything you haven't got,” I asked when they told me about all the things that are operated electrically. Two slide-outs, the awning, the step, the levelling system, etc. Two lithium batteries provide power for all their gadgets and a Redarc system keeps everything charged. Having 430W of solar on the roof helps, of course, but a 2kVA Honda generator sits in a locker in case the weather gods have a bad hair day or three. / 45