As regards noseweight, there are a number of factors to consider.
1. The max noseweight that your car can take according to its handbook
2. The max noseweight that the structure of your caravan can handle.
3. Max noseweight of the tow bar
Each may be a different weight but when towing you have to go with the lowest of the noseweights. This is, generally, the noseweight that your car can take and the tow bar that is fitted to your car should be able (at least) to take that weight. If not you probably have the wrong tow bar.
Bailey and alko give 100Kg for noseweight. You do not say what the max noseweight the car has. If the max the car can take is, say, 75Kg then the back of the car will droop if you load up to 100Kg.
Empty your van but leave the battery in plus gas and mover (which is usually in front of the axel) and the nose will be top heavy as all the heavy stuff is at the front of the van.
Check the lightest noseweight and load your van until you achieve that noseweight. Put things over the axel or towards the back...kind of to lift the front end.
From your description this sounds more like a loading issue than a Sale of Goods Act issue.
Under the Sale of Goods Act (SOGA) your caravan should be of satisfactory quality, sufficiently durable and free from any defects. Further it should be "as described". You do not provide any indication that the van is not of satisfactory quality, merely that you have not yet achieved the right noseweight. The lack of noseweight achievement, in the manner you have described, does not suggest that it is insufficiently durable nor that it it is not of satisfactory quality. It was sold as described. Thus, as you have set out your case, there is no breach of the Act. There needs to be something more, in terms of defect, than what you have described.
If the van, when properly loaded, cannot ever achieve the right noseweight to satisfy the Construction Design and Use regs (i.e to the lightest of the various noseweights) then it may not be of satisfactory quality, but that may mean that you have the wrong car to tow it. If the Dealer said that your car could tow it, legally, and you can show that you relied on that representation to buy it, then you may have a case, but only if this is not a loading issue.
You are taking the van back to be checked, and it would be helpful if you could post on here just what the dealer says.
I have seen quite a number of posts on here about Bailey noseweights. Some have problems getting it right and others say its down to correct loading to getting it right. There are many such Baileys on the road and they can't all have the wrong noseweight, so I reckon that it is possible to achieve the right noseweight. If this model of van could never get down to the right noseweight then the magazines would be screaming it out. They are not, so that brings me back to loading. Are you actually carrying too much, or is it all too much front loaded?
Anyway, rather than allege a breach of the Sale of Goods Act, take the dealers advice and then consider whether there may be a breach of the Act. Get your facts together first, before any allegation is made. Make an allegation and the dealer will go onto the defensive and not give anything away.
Let us know how you get on
Phil
------------- If you're not on a fell your wasting your feet and for 2014 it's.......Feb Castleton Mar North Yors Moors; Apr Sutton on Sea; May Thirsk; Jun Clapham/Riverside (Lakes); July Wharfedale; August Crakehall; Sept Knaresborough; Oct Wirral Park/Clitheroe
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