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large family van/car - Older99

Hi

We now have 3 rescue dogs so we are looking for a nice family vehicle for at least 4 adults and 3 dogs and going to the tip. It will be a 2nd car so budget less than £6k

We started to look at VW transporter T4/T5 but most seem either total rubbish or large projects

We have also had a quick look at transit customs as well

Any suggestions at what else we might look at ?

Thanks

large family van/car - RT

Hyundai Santa Fe or Kia Sorento - maybe a Vauxhall Zafira

large family van/car - gordonbennet

VW transporters are chic, apparently, so silly scene tax applies.

Vauxhall did a good sized crew cab type version of their Vivaro van and might also be found in the cloned alternative makes, its also one of the best medium sized for not rusting away before your very eyes, Toyota old model Hiace the best of the lot quality/durable wise but its getting old now.

There are smaller van/MPV versions, some in LWB form ie VW Caddy Maxi, and the usual Berlingo Kangoo Doblo types might be suitable.

Don't discount proper estate cars, but best try and find those with a proper squared off boot section, those that are style over substance fashion estates are little better than hatchbacks, think about Mondeo, Insignia, Avensis, Passat, Superb and an almost unlimited choice from the German marques...we have 3 dogs and our Forester despite being a small car through having a square lump of an estate section has plenty of dog room, sadly not enough rear leg rooms for adults, larger Outback version might be a left field choice if 4wd is of use, note don't touch a Subaru Diesel with a barge pole and petrol versions have a drink problem.

large family van/car - daveyK_UK
Normally it would be a Peugeot Partner Tepee or Citroen Berlingo Multispace but I would also consider a more unfashionable option in the Fiat Doblo.

They are a lot cheaper and while you can expect to pay out for suspension issues they are robust interiors and the 1.4 petrol engine is reliable provided the cam belt has been changed.

For £6k you should get a Doblo less than 10 years old even at todays crazy inflated prices.
large family van/car - Crickleymal
Normally it would be a Peugeot Partner Tepee or Citroen Berlingo Multispace but I would also consider a more unfashionable option in the Fiat Doblo. They are a lot cheaper and while you can expect to pay out for suspension issues they are robust interiors and the 1.4 petrol engine is reliable provided the cam belt has been changed. For £6k you should get a Doblo less than 10 years old even at todays crazy inflated prices.

I've been looking at petrol Doblos as a possible replacement for my 2006 Sorento. The problem is finding one that isn't a wheelchair conversion. They're like hen's teeth.

large family van/car - Older99

VW transporters are chic, apparently, so silly scene tax applies.

Vauxhall did a good sized crew cab type version of their Vivaro van and might also be found in the cloned alternative makes, its also one of the best medium sized for not rusting away before your very eyes, Toyota old model Hiace the best of the lot quality/durable wise but its getting old now.

There are smaller van/MPV versions, some in LWB form ie VW Caddy Maxi, and the usual Berlingo Kangoo Doblo types might be suitable.

Don't discount proper estate cars, but best try and find those with a proper squared off boot section, those that are style over substance fashion estates are little better than hatchbacks, think about Mondeo, Insignia, Avensis, Passat, Superb and an almost unlimited choice from the German marques...we have 3 dogs and our Forester despite being a small car through having a square lump of an estate section has plenty of dog room, sadly not enough rear leg rooms for adults, larger Outback version might be a left field choice if 4wd is of use, note don't touch a Subaru Diesel with a barge pole and petrol versions have a drink problem.

Thanks for that.. took a look at the caddy maxi..that might suit

large family van/car - Big John

Early mkII Superb Estate?

Citroen Berlingo / Peugeot Partner?

Edited by Big John on 27/02/2023 at 00:22

large family van/car - badbusdriver

Pretty much any full sized MPV/people carrier with the 3rd row seats removed/ folded away would do the job. This includes Ssangyong Rodius, Hyundai i800, Hyundai Trajet, Honda Stepwagon, Chrysler Voyager, Kia Sedona, Ford Galaxy, Seat Alhambra, VW Sharan. there may be others I've forgotten.

There are also JDM imports which would include Honda Stepwagon, Honda Elysion, Honda Odyssey, Toyota Aphard, Toyota Estima, Toyota Noah, Nissan Elgrand, Nissan Serena.

But my concern with all of the above would be safety. So unless you were prepared to get a proper heavy duty cage or some kind of partition, I'd be looking for something to keep the dogs completely seperate from the rest of the occupants. Van's were mentioned earlier, but a crew cab van of pretty much any variety is going to be a bag of nails at £6k. Might be a few double cab pickups (with canopy/truckman top) worthy of consideration though, but it would entail some kind of folding ramp to get them into and out of the rear without injuring themselves!.

large family van/car - Older99

Thanks for that

I guess I would need to check if these MPV's have anchor points in the boot. We always use dog seat belts for our dogs for safety

large family van/car - Older99

Update

Took a look at some used T4's ..all were rotting beyond belief

Took a look at zafira, touran and a few other smaller MPV's and they just wouldn't be big enough

really impressed though with the Ford Galaxy and could get a decent one under £5k BUT I have read that you need to avoid like the plague the auto gearbox .. is that true ?

large family van/car - badbusdriver

really impressed though with the Ford Galaxy and could get a decent one under £5k BUT I have read that you need to avoid like the plague the auto gearbox .. is that true ?

The Galaxy is the same under the skin as the Mondeo and S-Max, the auto versions of which use the Powershift (DCT). As with most of these, they can be reliable, but a lot of that is down to how previous owners have driven them. And how would you find that out?.

At a lower budget, the advice tends to be keep it as simple as possible. The dual clutch automated manual does not really fit into that category!.

But, as with most stuff like this, they are not all bad, you might get lucky.