Author Archives: Van Rental

Dublin Van Hire from VanRentals.ie

I am very pleased to welcome Dublin-based van hire company VanRentals.ie to the vanrental.co.uk van hire directory.

Based at Murphy’s Truck Centre in Ballymount, Clondalkin, VanRentals.ie offers a wide range of vans and trucks for hire, including:

  • Ford Transit Connect (small vans)
  • Ford Transit SWB (short wheelbase panel van, 1 tonne payload)
  • Ford Transit LWB (long wheelbase, high roof panel van with 1.5 tonne payload)

Also on offer are a range of light and medium trucks, ranging in weight from 3.5 tonnes upwards – most of these can be driven on a car licence and they are ideal for large house moves.

Best of all, VanRentals.ie is currently offering a massive 40% discount on all online van rental bookings in March 2009. Bookings must be made online and vehicles can only be used within the Republic of Ireland.

VanRentals.ie does allow its vans to be taken abroad (i.e. to the UK and continental Europe) but this is subject to additional costs and must be arranged in advance. Details are available on the VanRentals.ie website.

If you’d like to see your van hire company listed on vanrental.co.uk, click here for details of our advertising options.

VanRental.co.uk Expands To Ireland

We have now added two new van hire locations in Ireland to our database:

Our decision was triggered by the expansion of easyVan to Ireland and by an increase in the number of visitors to the site who are searching for locations in Dublin and Cork.

We are also about to add our first independent van hire company to our listing for Dublin – details will be posted up here in the next 24 hours.

Although VanrRntal.co.uk is a UK-focused site, we are always keen to add information and features that will be useful to our users – whichever country they are in. We also advertise specialist companies that offer one-way van hire to Spain, for example.

If you run a van hire company that serves the UK/Irish market – wherever you are located – then get in touch to see if we can help you promote your business and drive new traffic to your website.

Van Hire in Smethwick, Birmingham: KB Self Drive Hire

I’m pleased to welcome KB Self-Drive Hire of Smethwick, Birmingham to the vanrental.co.uk van rental directory.

KB Self-Drive offers a wide range of hire vans:

  • Small vans (e.g. Citroen Berlingo/Vauxhall Combo)
  • Short wheelbase panel vans (e.g. Ford Transit SWB)
  • Medium wheelbase panel vans
  • Long wheelbase panel vans (e.g. Mercedes Sprinter)
  • Luton vans with and without tail lift

Unlike some van hire companies, KB Self-Drive will provide insurance cover for drivers aged 21 and over.

If you’d like to see your van hire company listed on vanrental.co.uk, click here for details of our advertising options.

Express Van Rental of Sutton-in-Ashfield

I’m very pleased to welcome Express Van Rental of Sutton-in-Ashfield in Nottinghamshire to the vanrental.co.uk van hire directory.

Express Van Rental offers a wide range of vans for hire and is conveniently located in Sutton-in-Ashfield, near Mansfield. Express Van Rental’s services include panel van hire, Luton van hire and minibus rental.

You can contact Express Van Rental direct for more information using the following methods:

If you’d like to see your van hire company listed on vanrental.co.uk, click here for details of our advertising options.

Wishful Thinking Doesn’t Equal Economic Recovery

This week, BCA (one of the UK’s largest vehicle auctioneers) reported significantly increased sales in January and February.

Inevitably, comments were made about the green shoots of recovery – in this case by BCA’s head of LCV sales, Duncan Ward (as reported in Fleet News):

Are these the first green shoots of recovery? After all, used commercial vehicles are hardly a glamour buy, they are a business tool and if sales are strong it suggests there are plenty of businesses out there looking to the future.

I don’t mean to sound cynical or negative, but isn’t a more likely explanation for rising auction sales that businesses using vans are switching their purchases from new vans to secondhand vans – hence the pickup in auction sales, which are of secondhand vehicles.

Update: If you don’t believe me, then compare BCA’s used van auction results with these figures, published in Fleet News on Friday:

  • New LCV (van) registrations in January 2009: -35.6%
  • New LCV sales in January 2009: -36.6%

The same trend has been reported in the car market, both here and in the USA. Yet there are around 500,000 new cars stockpiled and unsold across Europe. If a recovery really was beginning, some of these would be shifting too, don’t you think?

In fact, that gives me an idea. Why not put all the unsold new cars and vans into auction and see what buyers would pay for them? It might temporarily weaken the secondhand market but it would provide a cracking incentive for buyers and would enable manufacturers to shift a load of stock, very quickly.

Save Money with Hourly Van Rental

According to Europcar, ‘nesting’ – staying in and carrying out home improvement – is the latest trend among cash-strapped Brits. I don’t know about that – I thought that home improvement was pretty old hat – but I do know that renting a van by the hour or being able to do can save you a lot of money and hassle.

You can hire a van with Europcar from just £5.99 per hour for a car-derived van and £6.99 per hour for a larger, Ford Transit-sized van (for a guide to van types and sizes, click here).

Hourly van hire is available from 0800 Monday – 1200 Friday each week – as vans need to be available for weekend hires. To get an hourly van hire quote from Europcar, click here and then enter your required times.

P.S. If you’re thinking of hiring a van to move house yourself, why not download our free DIY Removals guide?

It covers everything you need to know to hire a van and move your possessions safely – without breakages or the cost of a professional removals service.

LDV – Should It Be Saved?

 

LDV Maxus Luton Van

Although I am sympathetic to the plight of LDV’s 900+ workers and would not wish to see another UK manufacturing business* close, I’m not sure whether LDV really deserves to survive.

The problem is that while LDV has sold quite a few of its Maxus vans, it hasn’t made any money – in fact it has lost money for the last four years.

On top of that, LDV has gone bust numerous times before – hardly an inspiring vote of confidence in its management, engineering ability or product design and marketing.

Finally, from a driver’s point of view, I haven’t heard anything good about the LDV Maxus. Certainly, it is a functional van and can be used to do a job – but by all accounts its durability and general quality is poorer than its main competitors, some of which are also built in the UK (think Ford Transit in Southampton and Vauxhall Vivaro in Luton).

Given all of this, it’s not surprising that LDV’s management is planning to change the business’s direction to focus on the production of a green, electric van. The only problem with this is that as with all other areas of van production, Ford’s Transit is there ahead of them.

All-electric Transit and Transit Connect vans are already available from Smith Electric Vehicles – a British-owned and genuinely profitable company that’s been around for years. From next year, Ford will be selling electric Transit Connect’s under the Ford badge, too, in partnership with SEV.

As if that wasn’t enough competition, Renault is also working hard on electric vehicles through its partnership with Nissan, who in turn have a partnership with NEC, one of the world’s leading battery producers.

Does LDV have any of these advantages? No. Does it have a war chest of money to invest in developing this technology? No. It wants to borrow it from us, the taxpayers. Having failed to make a profit with a simple, conventional vehicle in a time of easy credit, it thinks it can make a profit with a difficult, unconventional vehicle that depends on new, sometimes unproven technology.

I’d rather not subsidise that, thanks.

Note: In an almost tragically pathetic gesture, a demonstration was arranged this week at LDV’s Washwood Heath, Birmingham site to protest at the lack of government support for the company. Just eight people turned up, as reported by the BBC.

*Pedant’s note: LDV’s factory is located in the UK even if it’s owned by the Russian GAZ Group.

i Miev Van Draws Closer – But Will It Pay?

A while ago, I wrote about the imminent release of the all-electric i Miev (pronounced “i meeve”), due in the UK in 2010. UK motoring publications have now been allowed to test the electric i Miev in car format – here are a couple of examples:

I also mentioned two further i Miev related possibilities:

  1. It may be made under licence in Europe by PSA and sold under the Peugeot and Citroen brands
  2. It will also be available as a van in the UK in 2011

I don’t know if volume production in Europe by the PSA group might bring down the i Miev’s estimated £17-£20,000 price tag (for the car version), blamed on the poor yen-sterling exchange rate (the i Miev’s made in Japan).

It’s also possible that for a van used exclusively in London, the extra cost of purchasing the i Miev might be cancelled out by having zero road tax, congestion charge or MOT costs and much lower fuel bills – Mitsubishi estimate that the i Miev will only cost 45p/100 miles to run. I don’t have the figures but instinct says that the loss of a diesel bill might be enough to make the whole life costs roughly equal – although resale value could be a big unknown.

Even in a best-case scenario, the i Miev still only looks useful to niche, city-only markets and drivers who don’t do more than 70-80 miles a day and can hookup their cars or vans to mains electricty every night.

(Thanks to SimpleMotoring.co.uk and CarHirePlace.com for the road test links.)

LDV In Trouble As Vauxhall Launches Van Cashback Deal

LDV Needs £25m Government Loan To Survive

Today brings news that the mystery automotive factory threatened with closure is in fact the Russian-backed tentative success story that is LDV.

Although its Maxus van appears to have been a success (indeed, LDV has just won an £11m contract to supply Maxus-based vehicles to the Jewson and Graham chains of builders merchants), LDV is in trouble and in need of government support.

According to today’s Guardian, LDV is in need of a £25m loan from the government if it is to survive. Apparently, LDV’s Russian owner, Oleg Deripaska, has been hit hard by the credit crunch and cannot finance the van maker. The short-term, emergency loan is needed to fund a management buy-out of the company, aimed at turning it into Europe’s first green van firm. Not sure what that means.

Update 1830 23/02/09: The government has ruled out a taxpayer-funded rescue for LDV, leaving its future somewhat uncertain and up to 6,000 jobs at risk. The Times has the latest update.

Vauxhall Offers 5% Cashback to New Van Customers

As LDV hits the buffers, Vauxhall has come up with a rather novel way to encourage people to start buying new vans.

The company is offering van buyers who put down a 20% deposit on new vans a cheque back for 5% of the total amount financed (i.e. a maximum of 4% of the purchase price). Although cashback deals aren’t new in the automotive world, the scale of this offer is larger than usual and reflects Vauxhall’s desperate need to start shifting new vans – even if they don’t make much money on them.

In this, however, they are no different to most car manufacturers – who collectively have around 500,000 unsold new vehicles sitting around in Europe at present. At least Vauxhall are trying to do something about it – although I suspect that used vehicles will continue to be more attractive to many buyers, as the UK’s vehicle auctioneers are finding.

Great Van Hire Deals from Sixt

Need to hire a van between now and the end of February?

Check out these 3 great van hire offers from Sixt:

1. Daily Van Hire Special

Rent a Ford Transit from just £45 per day (unlimited mileage)

2. Weekend Van Hire Special

This deal is perfect for anyone moving house:

  • 3 days for the price of 2
  • Ford Transit XLWB Jumbo or similar van – they’re huge inside!
  • From just £114 for the whole weekend, including unlimited mileage

3. Week Van Hire Special

Rent a small van such as the Volkswagen Caddy for a whole week (Mon-Fri) from just £172 per week.

These rates are usually internet-only deals, so why not visit Sixt’s website now for an instant, no-strings quote?