Sounds like you pitched the awning the tried to position the van in the correct relative spot? Much easier to park the van where you need it then erect and position the awning relative to the van. I’ve found that leaving the pegs out while attaching the tunnel then shifting the awning to get a good tunnel tension before pegging the awning in place works best. I know that doesn’t help if you actually drive away, but marking wheel positions helps for when you return.
Actually we tried to park the van and then position the awning, as you suggest, it just took us a while to get it (almost) right. Detached it today to head to the local supermarket and used pegs to mark the wheel positions. That worked OK.
However, I am not yet convinced that the driveaway element adds anything other than faff vs just pitching a tent near the van
Especially as however well it is done, keeping the whole van into awning area open (which we wanted to do) means that the tunnel is a definite escape opportunity for the dog
So for now, especially as we intend to do much exploring in the van, we’ve just tied up the side of the awning so that it is, in effect, a tent, with no tunnel connection to the van. Teenager is happier with this - more privacy - and the dog is happier as he’s in the van with us.
If you are fixing to a F45S which is what we have I find there's always a gap as the cassette sticks out further than a awning rail on the van would
We tend to put the tunnel fixing closest to the van quite away under the van and that lessens the gap at the bottom but can mess up the shape of the awning sometimes it very seldom looks perfect and the dog still gets out JRT straight under the van
Yes, exactly right, we are fixing the awning to a Fiamma F45S. I do think it would be a better fit if on a rail that’s on the van roof not the Fiamma.
@interbear. My read of your post was the same as
@Shaun Witts and my advice would be the same. It's a bit late now but there is also a good video on YouTube by Attwools (who also happen to be my local camping store!) on putting up a Kela which is useful for any airbeam type Vango. The top tip that I've posted on here before is once you've got it right. put a small peg in the ground to mark the centre of each wheel hub and join them with a length of fluorescent guy line - that way, if you do actually use the awning as a driveway to go out for the day, it's super easy to locate the van in the right place when you return. Another top tip is to treat the whole thing as a learning experience - once you've done it a couple of times, it gets a lot easier. Oh and don't worry about the wheel, just drink some more beer and ignore it for the rest of the trip (and get it fixed when you get home).
Indeed, see my response to Shaun’s post. Thanks. And I agree with the learning experience and beer, that’s a definite!
Attwools is great, we reviewed the video you mention and bought our driveaway awning from them, only 30 minutes up the M5 from us, it’s an excellent store for everything camping.