Advertisement
WildAx Pulsar
Sections:

Key Features

Model Year 2015
Class Rising Roof
Base Vehicle Citroën Relay
Price From (£) 42,995
Length (m) 5.00
Berths 2
Belted Seats 4
Main Layout Front Lounge
See full details
Advertisement

At a glance

Berths: 4 Travel seats: 4 Base vehicle: Citroen Relay SWB panel van Maximum weight: 3,300kg Payload: 400kg

Full review

WildAx Motorhomes’ latest conversion aims to get four berths, plus a full kitchen and a washroom with permanently sited toilet, into a panel van (with elevating roof) that is no more than 5m in length. Does it all work?


To start with, the company has based its conversion on a short-wheelbase Citroën Relay. The spare wheel hangs at the back because the Pulsar includes winterised fresh water and waste water tanks and a 20-litre refillable LPG tank as standard.

You don’t think you are driving a car with the Relay, but then you’re not harnessing a monster either, and you do get a firm ride. The cab spec could sway your thinking: there’s a DAB radio with USB, sat-nav and Bluetooth connection, plus a passenger airbag, as standard.

The two rear travel seats both fold down on site, so that with an extra backrest cushion you can turn either one into a settee.

The two pole-mounted tables can be installed in three different positions. They sit together to make a small dining table.

The Pulsar’s offside rear kitchen includes a Thetford Triplex three-burner hob with combined oven and grill and a large amount of workspace, while the draining rack folds away underneath the sink cover. Storage is adequate, too.

Surprisingly, there is a full washroom in this compact ‘van. It’s never going to be capacious, but it does have an easier-to-clean ceramic bowl toilet and a solid GRP floor. Tip up the basin and you can have a sit down shower, too - so a mirror behind the sliding tambour door would have been a bonus.

Come bedtime, if you have opted for the £995 bed in the roof, you pull the slats forward using two hands to form a 1.98m by 1.5m bed with the help of a mattress that’s otherwise stowed in the space above the cab. Headroom when lying here is a tight squeeze.

Access to the roof is provided by a sturdy clip-on ladder, but you can’t use this if you put together the lower bed, which you do by putting the extra settee cushion in the middle, supported by a sturdy but fiddly H-frame.

This is an abridged version of the full review appearing in the July 2015 issue of Which Motorhome.
Content continues after advertisements
Advertisement
Advertisement

Expert motorhome advice to your door!

Why not subscribe to one of our fabulous magazines and get expert advice, travel ideas, technical help and all the latest news for your motorhome and your motorhome adventures!

MMM Motorhomers' Magazine

Want to know more about MMM magazine?

Every month MMM has articles written by motorhomers who have been there and done it, from great UK and European (and further afield) tours, campsite reviews, owners' reports and DIY projects among other things. MMM's tests, reviews and expert buying guides are not to be missed. MMM's technical advice is a must and includes everything from weekend jobs to longer-term DIY projects. And much more!

About MMM magazine  
What Motorhome Magazine

Want to know more about What Motorhome magazine?

Every issue of What Motorhome magazine provides essential buying advice for anyone looking to buy a new motorhome or campervan or upgrade their existing model. With a pedigree of over 30 years of offering the best motorhome and campervan buying advice, every issue of What Motorhome includes more new motorhome and campervan reviews than you will find in any other magazine.

About What Motorhome  
Campervan Magazine

Want to know more about Campervan magazine?

Campervan is the exciting monthly magazine that will give you all the inspiration you need to explore the world in your campervan. Every issue is packed with real-life campervanning experiences, inspiring travel ideas in the UK and further afield, the best campsites to stay on, campervan road tests and reviews of the latest models, and much more!

About Campervan magazine  

Our verdict

It may not drive as well as a VW, but the Pulsar has much more space. It will work best as a two-berth, without the compromised roof bed.

Advantages

Only 5m long
Generous kitchen
Full washroom

Disadvantages

Lack of headroom in roof bed

Sign up to our free newsletter

Join our community and get emails packed with advice and tips from our experts – and a FREE digital issue!

Sign up now!

Subscribe to the new-look Campervan

Access every published issue plus the latest edition – all fully searchable!

Discover more

More dedicated campervan content

Advertisement
Advertisement