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Tax Increase on 4X4's Now spireling in to the caravan debate

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Quote by Jas-Tim

We have always had 4x4's because of the safety aspect, nothing at all to do with the 'vainity' aspect. Yes we use more fuel, yes we pay over £500 a year to insure the caravan, £150 service, and yes we spend an absolute fortune in this country during holidays and weekends away not ocunting the £17,000 to BRITISH industry when we bought the bloody thing. No one seems to think about the good that this is doing for the brittish ecconomy, surely a lot of 4x4 (aka caravan owners) already pay more than their fair share of tax to the government and to the ecconomy!

Can you explain to me how you are paying more than your fair share already please, I think I'm misunderstanding you.
Ta
Jas
XXX
Ok, saying we pay more than our fair share may sound like we are complaining, we are not, we chose to be caravanners, we chose to spend our money in this country rather than abroad, we chose to support the British economy by holidaying here. But people are quick enough to complain about the impacts of caravans, they don’t stop for one minute to think of all the good that comes from this pastime. As I said, all the money that is spent on this hobby, the VAT spent on the caravan purchase, on the servicing and Insurance each year, on the site fees we pay. It all adds up and is not the ‘cheap’ alternative holiday people seem to think. The british caravan industry is one of the strongest in Europe.
So ok, saying it is more than our fair share, is probably a bad way of saying it, BUT we do pay our fair share and perhaps now is the time for the government and powers that be started to support more efficient ways of running the larger vehicles that some people do actually need, provide help for people who do want to use the alternative fuels that do not have the same impact on the environment (like the bio fuel I mentioned on page 1 of this thread) and realise they are already taking enough money off caravanners, 4x4 drivers and start to look at the fat cat oil companies.
Edit - forgot to add this - Jas kiss
All the extra money we pay into the economy via second insurance policys,servicing/repair costs,site fee's when we go away and if as the goverment would have you believe 4x4's are "gas guzzlers" then dont we already get shafted via all the tax we pay on the extra fuel we are supposed to burning off just for the fun of it ???
Quote by Steve_Mids
The weight of the caravan is 1500kg....
Weight of the average medium saloon car is 1650kg..
What is being towed is almost as heavy as what is towing.....
Not the safest way to do things...
Recomended fact is that caravan weighs no more than 85% of towing vehicle...
With my 4x4 weighing almost 2000kg is obviously going to be far safer..
Also most of our pitches are in the middle of a field in the middle of nowhere so a 2 wheel drive saloon wont get very far across a field with 1500kg of caravan on its back in a wet muddy field now will it..

So how did people manage for years before 4X4s became popular? I know caravans have increased in size too but so have your average saloon car.
Quote by Sassy-Seren
So how did people manage for years before 4X4s became popular? I know caravans have increased in size too but so have your average saloon car.

Caravans were waaaaaaaaaaaay smaller and the average saloon car back then was as heavy as they are today...
Dont forget.......They were made of thick metals in them days....
Nowadays cars are made lighter and lighter to improve performance and fuel efficiency...
yep I have a big car too, makes up for the other diminiutive deficiencies.
Wish I'd renewed my car tax before the bufget instead of leaving it til the end of the month, still
... as others have said its the fuel that really draws the tax revenue.
My pick-up averages 26MPG, regardless of whether its laden or empty. By laden I mean carrying 3/4 to a ton in weight. How many car trips would that need? If it took 4 tripe, then the car would have to do 104MPG to save on fuel.
I know a few other factors come into it, but basically the more fuel you use the more you pollute, but also the more fuel you use the more duty you pay on fuel,
So if I use 2000 litres a year (say 12000 miles) I am paying about £2000, a good chunk of which is tax.
I don't really have to have 4 wheel drive, and I don't need a tow bar, but it has to be tough and it has to carry the weight and have the space.
I would rather have a nice car , but I have what I need. And I guess a quid or so extra per week isn't the end of the world. Its not the dosh that bothers me its the logic to try and justify it.
Am I going to do less miles because my RFL has gone up? No I do what I need to do. I don;t go out and take my Aunt Mabel out for a Sunday spin in the pick-up, Her falsies would drop out on the first bump.
So what effect will this have other than raising revenue? Zilch.
As others have said get cleaner fuels and do something about traffic jams. I don't care how big or small your engine or vehicle... What I do know is that we all do Zero MPH when we sit in jams, with the engine on so we can keep the climate control on and not get poisoned by fumes!!!.
Quote by Naughty Wigan Couple

We have always had 4x4's because of the safety aspect, nothing at all to do with the 'vainity' aspect. Yes we use more fuel, yes we pay over £500 a year to insure the caravan, £150 service, and yes we spend an absolute fortune in this country during holidays and weekends away not ocunting the £17,000 to BRITISH industry when we bought the bloody thing. No one seems to think about the good that this is doing for the brittish ecconomy, surely a lot of 4x4 (aka caravan owners) already pay more than their fair share of tax to the government and to the ecconomy!

Can you explain to me how you are paying more than your fair share already please, I think I'm misunderstanding you.
Ta
Jas
XXX
Ok, saying we pay more than our fair share may sound like we are complaining, we are not, we chose to be caravanners, we chose to spend our money in this country rather than abroad, we chose to support the British economy by holidaying here. But people are quick enough to complain about the impacts of caravans, they don’t stop for one minute to think of all the good that comes from this pastime. As I said, all the money that is spent on this hobby, the VAT spent on the caravan purchase, on the servicing and Insurance each year, on the site fees we pay. It all adds up and is not the ‘cheap’ alternative holiday people seem to think. The british caravan industry is one of the strongest in Europe.
So ok, saying it is more than our fair share, is probably a bad way of saying it, BUT we do pay our fair share and perhaps now is the time for the government and powers that be started to support more efficient ways of running the larger vehicles that some people do actually need, provide help for people who do want to use the alternative fuels that do not have the same impact on the environment (like the bio fuel I mentioned on page 1 of this thread) and realise they are already taking enough money off caravanners, 4x4 drivers and start to look at the fat cat oil companies.
Edit - forgot to add this - Jas kiss
Thank you sweetie :kiss: Makes more sense now.
Jas
XXX
Some people obviously need 4*4s, for work etc. I spent most of last year working in a disaster area and couldn't have gotten anywhere without one, and constatnly had to stop to winch other vehicles out of trouble. But have you seen most 4*4 on the road here?? Especially the new range rovers and vehicles like them? There's now way they'd be any good offroad or for work anywhere, they're so low to the ground, unless you worked as a pimp or a drug dealer. And frankly, people who drive cars in general and gas guzzlers especially, whether they're 4*4 or not need to be discouraged, because a huge amount of the pollution caused by cars has already happened before they're even turned on the first time. Because a huge percentage of the emissions are created during the building of the cars. Global warming is a SERIOUS issue, and one that'd going to matter more and more to all of us, so whether we like it or not, changes are going to happen sooner or later...
Gloabal warming started before the blast furnace was invented....before the industrial revolution.
The "natural state" of the planet is NOT the one we live in now....it's a state where CO2 was higher, so was the humidity and so was the temperature.....
In fact, I'm totally peed-off with the global warming industry...
Too wet ?
Global warming !
Too dry ?
Global warming !
Too hot ?
Global warming...
etc
etc
Putting taxes up to suppress the emission of CO2 is like freezing water in your fridge and sending it to the parched areas of the planet to end the drought.
It makes more sense to kill cattle....their farts do more damage than my car...
However....back to cars....have you thought of putting your cars on one policy and not having one for each ?
Quote by jomu
It makes more sense to kill cattle....their farts do more damage than my car...

:thumbup:
However....back to cars....have you thought of putting your cars on one policy and not having one for each ?

Insurance?? I didn't know you could do that... I am off to have a look lol
Shireen
xxx
I think the issue here is not a tax on 4x4 in particular, just large engines that by vurtue of some fuzzy logic ie the bigger the motor the more polution ( an we all want to stop pollution ...) means that the more you pay. Ironic in that as I had a landrover once that was roadtax exempt, cheap-ish as in I didnt go very far very fast and by some little modifications did about 20 to the gallon on unleaded ! I now have a small car pay a decreased road tax have slightly more range, can "put my foot down" and probably can do everything I did before , except pull a tractor out of a ditch ! I do miss the Landrover tho, but petrol will never be 6d a gallon again and technology gives me as much performance from a 1.4 litre that you could only get from a 2 litre plus years ago.
Quote by Steve_Mids

So how did people manage for years before 4X4s became popular? I know caravans have increased in size too but so have your average saloon car.

Caravans were waaaaaaaaaaaay smaller and the average saloon car back then was as heavy as they are today...
Dont forget.......They were made of thick metals in them days....
Nowadays cars are made lighter and lighter to improve performance and fuel efficiency...
I sit corrected ( with legs akimbo of course :giggle: )
I watched a Top Gear prog the other week and Mr Clarkson ( bless him and his outdated curly perm ) worked out that the average Chelsea tractor does only 9 miles to the gallon ! :shock:
As said earlier, I'll stick with my Golf diesel ( even though I will have to pay the top whack for tax
mad )
Quote by Sassy-Seren
I sit corrected ( with legs akimbo of course :giggle: )

What a pretty picture that paints....... wink
Quote by Sassy-Seren
I watched a Top Gear prog the other week and Mr Clarkson ( bless him and his outdated curly perm ) worked out that the average Chelsea tractor does only 9 miles to the gallon ! :shock:
As said earlier, I'll stick with my Golf diesel ( even though I will have to pay the top whack for tax
mad )

Most of the petrol ones driven round town do...
Mine is a diesel (2ltr) and does around town 30mpg so is pretty fuel effecient.
On a motorway run(solo) it will do low 40's to the gallon and when towing its about 25-28 mpg..
So its far better than the "Chelsea Tractors" that Clarkson et all keep harping on about.. :smile:
I don't quite agree that you need a big car to pull a caravan ! ok, if we are talking big as in showmans trailer well ok, but having got your average towing caravan on site, its not too difficult to move it by hand provided the ground is not soft. its more to do with balance and although towing with a small car eg braking and speed is harder and .remembering the towing max speed is 50/60 MPH the only advantage comes in steep hills where you need that traction power. Unless you tow big things all the time then really a big motor is no so practical . I remember some years back some local lads had a bedford CF 2 litre diesel van which was cut down and they got a artic lorry type mount grafted on to it ! they pulled a sort of long box trailer which when laden was a few tons ! with no probs !
Quote by aaardvark_11
Some people obviously need 4*4s, for work etc. I spent most of last year working in a disaster area and couldn't have gotten anywhere without one, and constatnly had to stop to winch other vehicles out of trouble. But have you seen most 4*4 on the road here?? Especially the new range rovers and vehicles like them? There's now way they'd be any good offroad or for work anywhere, they're so low to the ground, unless you worked as a pimp or a drug dealer. And frankly, people who drive cars in general and gas guzzlers especially, whether they're 4*4 or not need to be discouraged, because a huge amount of the pollution caused by cars has already happened before they're even turned on the first time. Because a huge percentage of the emissions are created during the building of the cars. Global warming is a SERIOUS issue, and one that'd going to matter more and more to all of us, so whether we like it or not, changes are going to happen sooner or later...

just down the road is a 4x4. YES he uses it off road, he parks on his lawn!
Quote by peenut
I don't quite agree that you need a big car to pull a caravan !

So what do u suggest I tow my 26ft 1.5 ton caravan with ???......Not forgetting the missus and the kids and all that goes with them for even a weekend away...
And 99% of my towing is done on A roads...
Answers on a postcard please....... rolleyes
Quote by peenut
I remember some years back some local lads had a bedford CF 2 litre diesel van which was cut down and they got a artic lorry type mount grafted on to it ! they pulled a sort of long box trailer which when laden was a few tons ! with no probs !

And that particular vehicle would have used more fuel and been even more polluting than my spawn of the devil 4x4......And not to mention the fact of it being overweight....
This topic is mixing up several different concepts, and I think it's in danger of becoming a slaging match rather than a discussion.
2 wheel drive vs 4x4: Lumping all 'chelsea tractors' together is missing the point, which is that almost nobody needs a 4x4 instead of a 2wd version of the same vehicle. In the late 80s, Audi won some rallys with the 4x4 Quattro, and from then on it's become something of a status symbol. 4 wheel drive is bolted onto lots of cars where it's totally inappropriate - Ford even made a 4x4 Granada!
The fact is that if you don't go seriously off road, then you are paying for and carrying around a lot of mechanicals that you really don't need, which soak up petrol and therefore pump out emissions unnesessarily.
The next topic is safety. I'm fed up with the chant of "I need a 4x4 to be safe" - I'm sorry, but the heavier your verhicle, the more likely you are to kill whoever you hit in an accident. The truth is that tall 4x4s are far more likely to roll over than normal cars, and 4x4 pick-up trucks (the worst of the breed) are counted as commerical vehicles and are exempt from lots of safety laws. Even if it was true that 4x4s are safer, we are in danger of starting an arms race, with everyone wanting to be bigger, taller and heavier than everyone else on the road - which is already happening in America.
As for towing a caravan... why isn't the government encouraging you to buy a second, more economical car to use when you are not towing? Tax discs actively discourage this. Where's the tax encouragement to build lighter caravans? The government is dressing up a cynical tax grab by pretending it's 'for the environment', which really annoys me.
Ok, we've established that your particular caravan needs a 4 by 4 to tow it rolleyes
It's a lifestyle choice and it comes with a cost along with all other lifestyle choices. Deal with it, pay it (or not) and get on with things cos complaining won't change many peoples minds or the governments for that matter. confused :roll:
They are being taxed heavily to stop the influx of people in cities driving them because they are fashionable, not a hard concept to understand and yes it's not fair if you use the car for the purpose which it was intended for.... but thats life, life isn't fair. :roll: :?
If huge cars go off the roads I don't care cos quite frankly many people who drive 4 by 4s on the roads near me can buy spray on mud so they actually look like they go somewhere off road in their offroad vehicle instead of just on the school run with little precious and teddy. :roll: And people wonder why childrens obesity levels are rising! :roll: theyre chaufeured everywhere in the gas guzzler that has never seen a caravan nor field in its life!
So when it comes to taxing larger cars.... go ahead. If you can't afford it or don't like it, change the car. dunno not difficult. and yes its what i would do.
Quote by little gem
Ok, we've established that your particular caravan needs a 4 by 4 to tow it rolleyes
It's a lifestyle choice and it comes with a cost along with all other lifestyle choices. Deal with it, pay it (or not) and get on with things cos complaining won't change many peoples minds or the governments for that matter. confused :roll:

I fully understand that its a "Lifestyle Choice"...
Why should I be penalised through my fuel usage(the price of which is about 75%) AND through my RFL ??
I just hope all those who are being shafted more than one way are gonna remember it when it comes round to the next election........ mad:
Quote by Mister_Discreet
As for towing a caravan... why isn't the government encouraging you to buy a second, more economical car to use when you are not towing? Tax discs actively discourage this. Where's the tax encouragement to build lighter caravans? The government is dressing up a cynical tax grab by pretending it's 'for the environment', which really annoys me.

We already have a second more economical vehicle...
We are also in a situation where we need 2 cars every day...
So it doesnt really help does it?
As for why its a 4x4 well.......
As I have said several times in this thread already......Its not because it is all wheel drive that I use it.....Its because it has sufficient kerb weight to make towing a much safer prospect......Trust me......I have towed a large van behind a saloon car of the same weight as the van......It gets a bit hairy....... :shock:
Quote by Steve_Mids
Ok, we've established that your particular caravan needs a 4 by 4 to tow it rolleyes
It's a lifestyle choice and it comes with a cost along with all other lifestyle choices. Deal with it, pay it (or not) and get on with things cos complaining won't change many peoples minds or the governments for that matter. confused :roll:

I fully understand that its a "Lifestyle Choice"...
Why should I be penalised through my fuel usage(the price of which is about 75%) AND through my RFL ??
I just hope all those who are being shafted more than one way are gonna remember it when it comes round to the next election........ mad:
Exactly.
Thats all anyone can do and while we're on that subject... if you don't use your vote you haven't got a right to complain imho. Staying away from the polls is no real protest, it just means its easier on some to win seats they dont deserve.
Rant out.
Quote by little gem
If huge cars go off the roads I don't care cos quite frankly many people who drive 4 by 4s on the roads near me can buy spray on mud so they actually look like they go somewhere off road in their offroad vehicle instead of just on the school run with little precious and teddy. rolleyes And people wonder why childrens obesity levels are rising!

FFS!!! :shock: :shock: :shock: :shock:
Kids will eat anything nowadays!!! confused :? :? lol :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
Quote by little gem
Ok, we've established that your particular caravan needs a 4 by 4 to tow it

Have we? I think all we have established is that you need something heavy to tow a caravan. Having 4-wheel drive and the aerodynamic efficiency of a brick isn't necesary. The second-hand car market is flooded with dirt-cheap big luxury saloons (Ford Scorpio / Vauxhall Omega etc.) that would suit the bill perfectly.
Quote by little gem
many people who drive 4 by 4s on the roads near me can buy spray on mud so they actually look like they go somewhere off road in their offroad vehicle instead of just on the school run

Well they deserve to pay a higher rate of tax..
Talk about more money than sense....
I just drive through the biggest puddle of dirty water I can find...
Does the trick just fine.....
biggrin
Quote by Sgt Bilko
If huge cars go off the roads I don't care cos quite frankly many people who drive 4 by 4s on the roads near me can buy spray on mud so they actually look like they go somewhere off road in their offroad vehicle instead of just on the school run with little precious and teddy. rolleyes And people wonder why childrens obesity levels are rising!

FFS!!! :shock: :shock: :shock: :shock:
Kids will eat anything nowadays!!! confused :? :? lol :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

rotflmao
Twat! Some days I wish Jags would point her button at you and zap you! :lol:
Don't get me onto the subject of kids being cotton wool wrapped and the decrease of the natural immune system cos kids don't play out anymore, inevitably eating a bit of mud along the way! :lol: :roll: nothing new sarge..... its why you turned out the way you did! :lol:
bolt
Quote by Mister_Discreet
Ok, we've established that your particular caravan needs a 4 by 4 to tow it

Have we? I think all we have established is that you need something heavy to tow a caravan. Having 4-wheel drive and the aerodynamic efficiency of a brick isn't necesary. The second-hand car market is flooded with dirt-cheap big luxury saloons (Ford Scorpio / Vauxhall Omega etc.) that would suit the bill perfectly.
rolleyes
Would you like to toddle off and check what the emissions are on those particular vehicles and then think again.....
And what the fuel economy round town is like...
Quote by Steve_Mids
Would you like to toddle off and check what the emissions are on those particular vehicles and then think again.....
And what the fuel economy round town is like...

Ok, I will... but common sense dictates that the aerodynamic saloons are going to be more economical and fuel-efficient than brick-shaped 4x4s of the same weight!
Quote by Mister_Discreet
Would you like to toddle off and check what the emissions are on those particular vehicles and then think again.....
And what the fuel economy round town is like...

Ok, I will... but common sense dictates that the aerodynamic saloons are going to be more economical and fuel-efficient than brick-shaped 4x4s of the same weight!
Not always...
As I said......I get 30+mpg round town out of mine..
Can't find any CO2 data online, but the MPGs probably give a good indication...
Ford Scorpio 2.9 24v Ultima
Weight: 1781kg (owners manual says it's suitable for towing up to 2000kg)
Urban MPG: 19.5
MPG at steady 56mph: 34.4
Driver Saftey Rating: 4 stars
Pedestrian Safety rating: 3 stars
Vauxhall Frontera 2.2 DTL 16v
Weight: 1820kg
Urban MPG: 18
MPG at steady 56mph: 21
Driver Saftey Rating: 3 stars
Pedestrian Safety rating: 1 star
Quote by Mister_Discreet
Can't find any CO2 data online, but the MPGs probably give a good indication...
Ford Scorpio 2.9 24v Ultima
Weight: 1781kg (owners manual says it's suitable for towing up to 2000kg)
Urban MPG: 19.5
MPG at steady 56mph: 34.4
Driver Saftey Rating: 4 stars
Pedestrial Safety rating: 3 stars
Vauxhall Frontera 2.2 DTL 16v
Weight: 1820kg
Urban MPG: 18
MPG at steady 56mph: 21
Driver Saftey Rating: 3 stars
Pedestrial Safety rating: 1 star

But this is not the figure that is used for towing, it is 85% of the car's kerbwieght. As for the Frontera, no one mentioned this particular 4x4 which is not infact a good towcar!
As stated above by Steve in approx 7 different posts, his 4x4 gives over 30 mpg, which is better than the ford you quote confused
Owner's fuel consumption figures will vary wildly, depending on use, and are almost always better than the government standardaised tests. I've seen everything from under 30mpg to over 65 from my current car, which has an official figure in the high 50s.
Without knowing a make and model and looking at the official figures you can't make a reliable comparison.
I'm not going to spress Steve_mids for his specific make/model/engine size becasue that's prying, but it's a simple fact of physics that aerodynamic cars are more economical than tall boxy ones, and no amount of pride of ownership is going to alter that!