Full review
AT an inch under 29 feet in length and with a maximum authorized mass of 5000kg, the Lunar Roadstar 900 is a sizeable chunk of rolling real estate.
Stepping through the 900’s entry door puts you face to face with an L-shaped sofa, the L’s shorter arm being a forward-facing travel seat. What, there’s nowhere for the outboard passenger’s legs to go? Actually there is, because the wall-side seat’s squab sits on a constituent that can be swivelled.
Doing this reveals a transverse, rearward-facing seat that is the leading half of a full dinette. White hide trim, blending agreeably with two tones of wood finish (with matt silver highlights) and contrasting with black-and-flower-print curtains, gives the 900’s lounge a pleasant ambience.
The Roadstar also has plenty of storage space, with head-level lockers, complete with under lockers all round.
The overcab bed makes up easily, using a board-backed cushion stowed in the luton. The overcab ladder lives in the luton too, this area having groovy LED mood lighting as well as a ceiling light.
Diesel-fired heating – the latest Webasto DualTop – can make the interior as warm as it looks and heats the water effectively too.
One pace aft takes you to a roomy L-shaped kitchen. Standing cheek-by-jowl with a Spinflo Caprice MkIII cooker (domestic-style with gas burners and an electric hotplate) is a well-equipped sink unit.
Well-equipped? With a Dometic Cramer drainer sink, a pull-out worktop, a three-drawer cabinet, a cutlery drawer and a further cabinet with door-mounted wire racks, let’s just say it’s appointed more than comprehensively.
Two head-level lockers enhance the storage space and the short arm of the ‘L’ houses a tambour-doored cabinet offering still more space.
Above this is a shelf with a vertical section that folds down to give table space to the rear bedroom.
And topping the stack is a TV cabinet (tambour-doored front and back), with a pendant, slide-out swivel mount for an LCD TV. On the left side of the kitchen, a 175-litre Dometic (non-AES) fridge/freezer stands beneath yet another tambour door, which slides open to reveal a Daewoo microwave oven.
To the rear of this stack is a useful cabinet with six, lipped shelves while forward of it is a large, full-drop wardrobe with an inconvenient fore-and-aft rail, a light and three drawers beneath. The leading face of the wardrobe carries a padded trim panel, with two double coat hooks and a handy document pocket.
The hardware (and softwear) described can be closed off from the remainder of the interior by a transverse pleated curtain. In the boudoir thus created, two short single beds flank the central walkway through to the tail washroom.
This spacious en-suite enclave houses the expected Thetford swivel cassette WC, opposite an entirely private shower enclosure with a folding screen.
An oval washbasin, offset slightly to the right of centre, stands above a tambour-doored shelved cabinet and small, lipped cubbies stand respectively to either side of a good-sized mirror and ‘grey marble’ topped basin unit.
Two head-level lockers, placed over the WC, add further to the washroom’s storage capacity and a ceiling light with a frosted glass lens illuminates the whole.
And as well as having a toothmug, a towel ring and a loo roll holder, the washroom has a narrow vertical cupboard for the 900’s dining table. It’s a long way to carry that into the lounge, though!
The 900’s bedroom verges, quite appropriately, on the luxurious. The beech-sprung beds have a headboard apiece and the right one has a shelved aperture above. But why aren’t the beds longer? The designers were hardly short of space to work with!
In the upper bedroom corners, lipped corner shelves provide each sleeping partner with oddments space. A centre light and four spotlights, mounted under the three-strong-per-side ranks of head-level lockers, provide illumination, and there is still more space beneath the beds.
The Roadstar 900 is impressively large – and largely impressive. Seating four (legally when in motion) and sleeping six, it has more than enough space to do both. Judging by this brief test, it appears capable of doing both comfortably.
A full version of this review first appeared in the June 2008 issue of Which Motorcaravan magazine. To order a road test call 01778 391187. To subscribe to the magazine, click here.Content continues after advertisements
While the Roadstar 900 does have six comfortable berths, it only has four travel seats. At 29ft long and a 5-tonne MAM it's a big beast, too.