Video review - Adria Sport A 660 DP
Key Features
Model Year
2011
Product Class
Overcab Coachbuilt
Product Model Base
Fiat Ducato
Price from (£)
£43580
Length (m)
7.23
Berths
6
Belted seats
5
Main Layout
Garage
Full Review
THE A 660 DP is a six-berth overcab coachbuilt from Adria’s new-for-2011, more affordable, Sport line-up with the emphasis on massive garage storage.
This sort of activity-lead, family-friendly motorhome is almost old-school European design, but with few direct rivals Adria may have found a useful market niche virtually to themselves.
After all, the Sport A 660 DP has plenty of appeal – a massive garage, three big double beds, seatbelts for six, and a generous spec list, all for under £50,000. And the design, with stylish ambient lighting, duo-tone fabrics, chromed locker handles, dark wood with contrasting white panels and a jet black fridge, is very definitely bang up-to-date.
It eschews recent trends for an Ixeo or Matrix-style drop-down bed and sticks with a big, classical luton overcab, and where you might expect a half-dinette and swivel cab seats, the Sport opts for the old continental favourite of a pullman-style lounge.
So how does this mix of a traditional theme and ingredients from 2011 work in practice? A week in the Lakes would give us the answers...
Click here to read the full version of this motorhome review, published in the March 2011 issue of Which Motorhome.
This sort of activity-lead, family-friendly motorhome is almost old-school European design, but with few direct rivals Adria may have found a useful market niche virtually to themselves.
After all, the Sport A 660 DP has plenty of appeal – a massive garage, three big double beds, seatbelts for six, and a generous spec list, all for under £50,000. And the design, with stylish ambient lighting, duo-tone fabrics, chromed locker handles, dark wood with contrasting white panels and a jet black fridge, is very definitely bang up-to-date.
It eschews recent trends for an Ixeo or Matrix-style drop-down bed and sticks with a big, classical luton overcab, and where you might expect a half-dinette and swivel cab seats, the Sport opts for the old continental favourite of a pullman-style lounge.
So how does this mix of a traditional theme and ingredients from 2011 work in practice? A week in the Lakes would give us the answers...
Click here to read the full version of this motorhome review, published in the March 2011 issue of Which Motorhome.