Strictly Dusty is correct:- we should expect to have great quality caravans at that price, but as others have pointed out it should also apply to all new caravans regardless of the price point.
It's a reflection on the state of play when we even have to mention the idea of expecting quality. A customer who buys a new UK caravan who finds literally absolutely nothing wrong with it, is the exception, but it should be the rule.
Caravans have been around for about a century, longer if you include the horse drawn ones. Long enough for the basic requirement of them to be weatherproof to have been thoroughly and conclusively resolved. Long enough for them to be strong enough to survive a life on the roads.
Despite what the manufacturers may claim, In the context of our modern world, caravans are not cutting edge technology, nor are they high precision devices and their concept is not new. The manufacturers should not be hiding behind such weak excuses for the failures they dispatch from their factories.
End users should be livid when even small things are not right with their new purchase. But all too often they are problems which shouldn't even have got through the factories cursory final inspections. Its the apparent total disrespect the manufacturer seem to show towards end users, by putting profits ahead of ensuring customer satisfaction first time every time.
Caravans manufacturers are already charging their customers extra to cover expected warranty costs. If their products design and build quality were improved, the manufacturers could and should reduce the prices of their products by several thousand pounds based on 2024 prices.
There are many examples that show preventing common product failures at the design stage is far cheaper than having to resolve the problem when it's in the discovered by the user. Caravan manufacture's don't seem to realise that by adopting such principles, can make a company far more profitable on a smaller turnover.