Fixed bed or not??

Paulwids
Paulwids Forum Participant Posts: 12

We have been caravanning for aprox 12 months now and currently have a Sterling moonstone which does not have a fixed bed. We love the caravan but we are undecided as to whether we should swap to a fixed bed, We tow with a mitsubishi l200 so weight is not
a problem. Any advice anyone???

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Comments

  • Tinwheeler
    Tinwheeler Forum Participant Posts: 23,142 ✭✭✭
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    edited August 2016 #2

    Only you can decide, Paul. 

    Some people swear by fixed beds while others swear at them. Personally, I prefer the extra space gained by not having a fixed bed. Kitchens and washrooms tend to suffer loss of space in fixed bed models.  

  • Arrivakids
    Arrivakids Forum Participant Posts: 214
    First Comment
    edited August 2016 #3

    For us a large Bathroom is a waste would rather have the fixed bed the bed is made just like at home no time wasted and frustration who is going to make it .

  • JVB66
    JVB66 Forum Participant Posts: 22,892
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    edited August 2016 #4

    I agree ,it is noted elswhere that some manufacturers are now leaning towards two singles but have  the same lack of other facilities ,a twin axle might give the space but they can also be restrictive at times 

  • dennisps
    dennisps Forum Participant Posts: 51
    edited August 2016 #5

    If you have an L200, then have you thought of a fifth wheel caravan? Might not be something you want to look at, but thought I would mention it!! You get a double bed, plus loads of space... and they don't have to be massive!

  • DSB
    DSB Club Member Posts: 5,669 ✭✭✭
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    edited August 2016 #6

    Fixed bed for us.  There will only be two of us, by and large, so a 4 birth fixed bed is ideal.  It gives us enough space, a seperate sleeping and living area, and a lovely large storeage area below the fixed double.

    In the end, everyone will choose what is best for them, but at the moment, I can't see us going back to setting up beds each night.

    David 

  • eurortraveller
    eurortraveller Club Member Posts: 6,829 ✭✭✭
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    edited August 2016 #7

    Fixed bed would mean bigger, longer, wider, heavier  caravan. Don't want bigger, longer, wider, heavier caravan. Happy with 4.20 metres x 2 metres wide Eriba.  It flies . And when I get home I can wheel it into the shed by hand. Smile

  • DavidKlyne
    DavidKlyne Club Member Posts: 13,860 ✭✭✭
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    edited August 2016 #8

    The last caravan we owned had a fixed bed and we found it very convenient to have a bed ready made up rather than constructing on every night. It takes a while to get used to not having as much surface storage space but then you realise you have more space elsewhere. We have sinced changed to a motorhome and that also has a fixed bed.

    David

  • IamtheGaitor
    IamtheGaitor Forum Participant Posts: 529
    edited August 2016 #9

    I love our fixed bed. A decade  ago we had a double dinette layout.  We found that when we only took two children with us instead of three on most holidays we left the back bed made up so in the end we bought a foam mattress for it and took the cushions out.  That was our intro to a fixed bed - the comfort and the ease of not having to make it up  - and we have never gone back and wouldnt want to do so. 

    We had an RV and we did look at fifth wheelers when we came back to a caravan but the restrictions of the hitch in the load area made us decide not to go for it. They are lovely though :-)

  • Fysherman
    Fysherman Forum Participant Posts: 1,570
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    edited August 2016 #10

    Quite like the idea of a fixed bed but as I am nearly  six foot it would mean the caravan would need be quite large to have a bed that will accommodate me without my feet sticking out the end.

  • IamtheGaitor
    IamtheGaitor Forum Participant Posts: 529
    edited August 2016 #11

    Quite like the idea of a fixed bed but as I am nearly  six foot it would mean the caravan would need be quite large to have a bed that will accommodate me without my feet sticking out the end.

    Hubby is 6ft 3 and loves ours now but ironically the one in the RV was cramped for him.  It was a corner bed with the wall at one end and a wardrobe at the other so cutting a hole in the wardrobe wall for his feet was the only solution as they couldnt hang
    over. 

  • Paulwids
    Paulwids Forum Participant Posts: 12
    edited August 2016 #12

    we love the extra space the single dinette gives and the extra space in the kitchen but then you have the disadvantage of having to make the bed up each night and having to climb across both my wife and dog if i need to use the toilet.

  • EmilysDad
    EmilysDad Forum Participant Posts: 8,973
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    edited August 2016 #13

    We like the space in the end bathroom.  It takes a couple of minutes to make the bed or put it away.  Granted,  if you both fall asleep & wake up at silly o'clock, making the bed is the last the thing you feel like doing. 

  • SteveL
    SteveL Club Member Posts: 12,303 ✭✭✭
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    edited August 2016 #14

    we love the extra space the single dinette gives and the extra space in the kitchen but then you have the disadvantage of having to make the bed up each night and having to climb across both my wife and dog if i need to use the toilet.

    That is not necessarily going to change, depending on the design. Our first van had a fixed double in the rear corner, with a chopped of end and fairly restricted access. Somebody had to climb over to get out. Now have single fixed beds, much easier, especially for anyone with restricted mobility.

  • JillwithaJay
    JillwithaJay Club Member Posts: 2,485 ✭✭
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    edited August 2016 #15

    I'm in the no fixed bed camp.  There's only the two of us but, more often than not these days I'm on my own.  Whether I'm on my own or OH is with me, we make single beds which only takes a minute. Many of the fixed beds aren't full double size as some have corners cut off so someone only has three quarters of a bed.  

    I like the space in the end bathroom as it's private and closed off for washing, showering and dressing.

    This layout, with the door near the back, also gives us a nice roomy lounge area. 

    photo 78301b06-7bdd-45fe-8ae2-d4d2cae14135_zpssi5htrez.jpg

     

  • Fysherman
    Fysherman Forum Participant Posts: 1,570
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    edited August 2016 #16

    That's the layout we currently have Jill and it certainly works but when away for a couple of weeks we find ourselves wishing for a fixed bed as we make up the front double. Not hard but sometimes you just don't want to bother.

  • Paulwids
    Paulwids Forum Participant Posts: 12
    edited August 2016 #17

    We also found that too. The longer we were away the more making the bed up at night became a problem. We love the caravan we have, apart from having to make the bed up at night and the difficulty of getting out of bed during the night. What we cant work
    out is whether the benefits of a fixed bed out weigh the benefits of the extra space during the day. We dont want to change to a fixed bed and then regret it.

  • young thomas
    young thomas Forum Participant Posts: 11,356
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    edited August 2016 #18

    good point above...

    if only away for a weekend or a week, making up the bed might be ok, go away for four months and youd probably think differently....Happy

    it only took us a year to realise that, with longer breaks beckoning, the faff of sofa beds and storing bedding was never going to work....

  • Tinwheeler
    Tinwheeler Forum Participant Posts: 23,142 ✭✭✭
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    edited August 2016 #19

    We do the same as Jill. Use it as two singles and it only means removing back cushions and unrolling a couple of sleeping bags. No trouble at all.

  • Jood
    Jood Forum Participant Posts: 120
    edited August 2016 #20

    We have a 2-berth and keep considering changing to a fixed bed. However, my husband is over 6 foot tall, and to be honest, yes it is a bit of hassle making the bed up, but I'd rather 5 minutes of hassle in order to have a huge bed and a decent night, as
    opposed to having the convenience of a fixed bed but feel squashed and cramped all night, and then groggy in the morning. Whatever one opts for, there's always a compromise. 

  • bandgirl
    bandgirl Forum Participant Posts: 440
    100 Comments
    edited August 2016 #21

    We started out with a motorhome which we had to make up into a double bed every night. I didn't like the fact that one of us always had to scramble over the other to get in & out. When we changed to a caravan, we got a 2 berth and use the settees as two
    singles. True, making them up & putting away is a chore, but only takes a couple of minutes once you get into a routine. We cut down the workload when I had a bad back last year by leaving a mattress protector & bottom sheet on, and putting on a throw during
    the day. Recently we thought about upgrading our van, and convinced ouselves that fixed singles were for us but, after looking at a few, decided to stick with a newer 2 berth instead, at least until we're both retired.

  • trellis
    trellis Forum Participant Posts: 1,102
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    edited August 2016 #22

    Maybe our next van will have to have fixed single beds,as I'm getting fed up with scrambling over my wife at night (stop sniggering at the back boy !!) .

  • hitchglitch
    hitchglitch Forum Participant Posts: 3,007
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    edited August 2016 #23

    Comfortable, convenient and bags of space underneath but one heck of a compromise. If you like touring, especially abroad, just think of all that extra space/weight you are pulling around. Is it worth it? Only you can decide.

    In the end after successive upgrades resulting in a 1600 kg 7.4m van it drove us to a compact motorhome with two parallel seats/beds and Duvalays. Back to touring as we used to with the freedom of the road and no worries about manoevering into a tight pitch
    or around narrow Italian lakeside roads.

    If you are going up and down the motorway to a Club site for a couple of weeks weeks, great idea.

  • IamtheGaitor
    IamtheGaitor Forum Participant Posts: 529
    edited August 2016 #24

    Maybe our next van will have to have fixed single beds,as I'm getting fed up with scrambling over my wife at night (stop sniggering at the back boy !!) .

    I would have happily gone for singles for this reason but OH refused.   A fixed bed also has the advantage if someone goes to bed or gets up at a different time - for example I get up much earlier and just leave him asleep. Or if someone is  ill - if I have a migraine I can go and go to sleep in the day time without it affecting OH too much.

  • Metheven
    Metheven Club Member Posts: 3,987 ✭✭✭
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    edited August 2016 #25

    Wouldn't go back to making up the beds now, the seating cushions were not giving us a good nights sleep so now have the comfort of an 8" deep mattress, perfect zzzzzzzzzzz's Smile Yes the caravan is a little longer with reduced space but its a 4 berth used by two people so ideal for us.

  • JVB66
    JVB66 Forum Participant Posts: 22,892
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    edited August 2016 #26

    We have a two berth and both front seats are over 6ft long and with the new "dream sleep" we just turn them over and have a dream sleepCool

  • kaenergas
    kaenergas Forum Participant Posts: 171
    edited August 2016 #27

    Being only a short ????  the fixed bed is fantastic, 

  • RangeRoverMan
    RangeRoverMan Forum Participant Posts: 125
    edited August 2016 #28

    We would pack up caravanning if we had to give up our fixed island bed.

  • young thomas
    young thomas Forum Participant Posts: 11,356
    1000 Comments
    edited August 2016 #29

    We have a 2-berth and keep considering changing to a fixed bed. However, my husband is over 6 foot tall, and to be honest, yes it is a bit of hassle making the bed up, but I'd rather 5 minutes of hassle in order to have a huge bed and a decent night, as
    opposed to having the convenience of a fixed bed but feel squashed and cramped all night, and then groggy in the morning. Whatever one opts for, there's always a compromise. 

     

     

    trust you guys slept well in the garden last night....we had a lovely time, thanks....

    KG, was checking out his rev counter on the way home....closet HamiltonUndecided

  • JonCaz
    JonCaz Forum Participant Posts: 84
    edited August 2016 #30

    Fixed rear bed 650 is perfect for me and my wife.

    Its like a little apartment, we love it!

  • EasyT
    EasyT Forum Participant Posts: 16,194
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    edited August 2016 #31

    When we were looking for a change of 'van in 2012 we had initially secided on a fixed double. However on further consideration, as we would have trouble, even with the motor mover, bringing the van in and out due to the narrowness of the road outside
    we couldn't go much beyond a 7m shipping length. The lost length of the front seating was the main reason for a change of mind. We chose the side dinette option Clubman ES and are very happy with the choice, The front seating makes two singles easily with
    little effort and are well sprung and comfortable. As we us sleeping bags it makes it easy. The width is such that I leave the back rest on on my side and have plenty of width and don't need to turn the bench seats over to make them comfortable. The side dinnete
    also makes the 'van feel more spacious and is, for me, ideal for food prep. I have arthritis in my spine and find the table height suits me well for prep.