RV REVIEW
LAGOON FLAGSHIP ON TOUR
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THE SILI
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WAS DO
the leg well for accessing general items that
may have been stored next to the battery. This is beneath the vanity bench, with a
hinged section of bench providing access.
A north-south queen-size bed is provided in
the front bedroom, along with the expected
overhead lockers and wardrobes. Each
wardrobe has niche, where you might put
your reading glasses and book, etc., and there
are also 240V/12V powerpoints inside. When lifting and lowering this section of bench, I
noticed it was a tight fit on one size – it tended to
bind on the rest of the bench and was in need
of just one millimetre of additional clearance.
The rear bathroom is reasonably generous
in terms of space – in fact, each of the van’s
‘zone’s’ feels quite spacious – and even comes
with a linen cupboard in the offside-rear
corner, next to the cassette toilet.
You’ll also find a rear vanity, storage
cupboards, a separate moulded-fibreglass
shower cubicle, and a washing machine.
On a similar subject, the hole in the shelf
accommodating the kitchen sink’s drain
was a little splintery. These two points
reflect the fact that caravans are, by and large,
hand-built vehicles and, in one case, nothing
that a bit of sandpaper wouldn’t fix.
I did note, however, that the silicone work
was done by a skilled hand – no giant
gobs of silastic that I could find, unlike in
plenty of other new vans on the market.
/ 39