After almost 6 years with our first van travelling this great land full time, we decided it would be nice to buy a new van capable of more remote travel. Such as Tanami Desert, Savannah Way, to mention just a few dreams. We had only travelled as far as Albany from Townsville when this dream became possible when I received a phone call from my old company almost begging me to come back to work. My wife and I decided this what we would do.
I had discussions with Sunland Caravans who came across as the best and most honest manufacturer in Australia, by his daily use of a caravan forum. I wrote to him with my dream caravan and what we needed.
This was the start of my nightmare. Which has cost me over $20,000 to fix manufacturing errors and lack of interest in fixing the problems. Serious problems that could easily have killed my wife and I. I am writing this post to show prospective buyers all the things that can and do go wrong and how what can only be described as rogue builders get up to maximise their returns at your loss. My problems started because I trusted this builder 100%. He was like an old friend. Nothing was too much to ask for.
Our initial talks described an off road van designed for full time use in remote areas. To this end, we asked for 1000kg carrying capacity, large 12v compressor fridge freezer and lots of solar to run it all. We asked for a built in 300w pure sine wave inverter to power a totally separate independent 240v system along side of the external supplied 240v system. We needed a minimum of 300 amp/hr AGM batteries and a 40amp 240v charger and a 60 amp MPPT solar regulator, stepped down to 12v. The solar panels to be 24v to maximise current from the solar to the regulator.
We needed maximum water capacity and decent 4 burner LPG stove, plus an LPG heater.
The only problem raised by the manufacturer was that he could only give me 900kg capacity with a TARE of 2600k and ATM 3500k, my Cruiser's maximum towing capacity.
All this was in writing and I still have the original correspondence on file should anyone dispute what I just typed.
I was quoted a special price if the van could be ready by November but to be used as a display van until March 2011. This was the start of the untruths I was later to discover.
We made a few minor changes such as larger solar panels and a 6' bed. We deleted the second inverter for the microwave as being too complicated.
We saw the new van in February 2011 before heading to Germany to visit our daughter and grandkids. I posted on a caravan forum how good it looked and how good it was to have 900k carrying capacity. The manufacturer posted re this capacity on the forum and did not correct me. I have a copy of these posts. But I should have realised at the time I was fooled by the Bling! That is my first warning to prospective buyers - BEWARE the bling! It hides a multitude of sins.
We picked the van at the end of March the day we returned from Germany. Tired and jet lagged. DON'T EVER do this!!!
The staff had filled all three 125Litre water tanks - wasn't that nice....and it had no towball.....still deciding on ball or DO35 they asked...but I had already told them that the DO35 was OK...
So I couldn't tow to the weighbridge to check it. What a fool I was! I still trusted the manufacturer. I also couldn't find the compliance plate....but things got rushed and the question was ignored.....and I forgot....I was tired and wanted to get going......three times a fool now!
I signed some papers about warranty and the final payment but never got a copy. I don't remember the signing the warranty paper but I had no need to read it did I??? I trusted the manufacturer and I had already read his published warranty - 20 years on the chassis and 3 years everything else...so why read the document?
Now that's another lesson!
We then discover water pouring out of the bathroom cabinet and out the door. Call the service manager who comes and fixes it. They had forgotten the plumbing locking pins. Two months later we get the same problem. On inspection, they had forgotten the locking pins again when they 'fixed' it the first time! They had also forgotten the inserts that should be in all click joints. I fixed.
But this was some of the water leak damage - keep in mind this showed upm when the van was only 6 months old!

Towing the van out after the factory closed and went home, it was raining. The first red light and I put the brakes on and nothing happened! I locked up all four Cruiser wheels but nothing on the van. I slid through the red light. Inspection found that the brakes were never checked and adjusted, plus one magnet had fallen out!
Got to Gympie and camped. Tried the washing machine and all hell broke loose. I stopped the machine to find the bowl would not move - locked solid! They had forgotten to remove the shipping bolts. Towed back to Caboolture where the machine was removed and the shipping bolts removed. Did not use the machine again for several months, as we were house sitting. When we did, the machine jumped all over the place, damaging the woodwork. Sunland had forgotten to screw the retaining bolts back into place
Phjoto shows just one of the screws out of four not screwed back in:

This photo shows damage to the timberwork:

Before we found this out, water leaks through the 4 Seasons hatch required the ceiling to be replaced and all four windows in the bedroom had not used the correct sealant and had to be replaced. The damage to the walls has now only become visible. The LPG regulator was leaking 9kg of LPG a week. The LPG compartment was not legal, with no breather at the top to allow air in. The outlet had a rubber dongle on it to prevent dust ingress, but also stopped the leaking LPG to escape. I discovered that it was highly unlikely that the caravan was ever inspected to issue the LPG certificate. First of all I discovered that the certificate was issued 18 weeks prior to my purchase, when the Qld law states a maximum of 12 weeks. Plus the certificate says he tested a 3 burner LPG stove and mine is a 4 burner. Pluis it never mentions the other appliance installed, being a Truma LPG heater or the LPG baynet. This is the certificate (Yes I know! I should have read the document when I first got the van!) I have since paid for another inspection and true and accurate certificate.

That's enough for now. I am a slow typist. In a few days I will show how the suspension broke off the chassis and why. Plus the false TARE weight on the compliance plate and how and why the rest of the chassis failed safety regulations and what had to be done to fix it. I will also tell you what the various authorities have done or not done and who and how you handle all these problems and some advise on who to contact and chase up. And what Minister to contact when their departments get lazy.
This is the NATA report the manufacturer obtained in an effort to blame me for the suspension breaking off the chassis. AS you can read, this was not the case:

