There are some members who don’t extol the virtues of awnings they have purchased. Previous posts will show that some even have relatively unused ones stored not to be used again. It’s quite possible for a contributor to be objective, and give an appraisal of their awning, or previous ones. Following your advice would lead to no advice at all to the OP. Not much point in a Forum then.You will doubtless get a plethora of answers from any number of people, each extolling the virtues of whatever they have purchased as clearly that must be the very best, musnt it??
My advice would be to look at as many as possible, and then make your own mind up as to what would suit you the best.
We have been looking for several months for an awning to replace our Isabella Magnum, but no luck with finding a suitable lightweight replacement. Our concern is buying an awning, finding it unsuitable and it being consigned to the garage until it rots and falls apart.You will doubtless get a plethora of answers from any number of people, each extolling the virtues of whatever they have purchased as clearly that must be the very best, musnt it??
My advice would be to look at as many as possible, and then make your own mind up as to what would suit you the best.
Get a grip B. You and I know nothing can beat an Isabella Magnum for ease of erection, quality and ability to withstand inclement weather 😉😉. I tried the Kampa Air Rallye Air thing. Absolute junk still residing in the loftWe have been looking for several months for an awning to replace our Isabella Magnum, but no luck with finding a suitable lightweight replacement. Our concern is buying an awning, finding it unsuitable and it being consigned to the garage until it rots and falls apart.
We have an Isabella Minor (slightly smaller than the Magnum) great little porch awning and light enough if you split the fabric and poles into 2 different bags.Get a grip B. You and I know nothing can beat an Isabella Magnum for ease of erection, quality and ability to withstand inclement weather 😉😉. I tried the Kampa Air Rallye Air thing. Absolute junk still residing in the loft
The Izzy’s are £2000. At a budget of £500 I’d suggest the OP saves a bit longer or looks for a used Izzy. If quality doesn’t matter…………..🥴🥴🥴
That is the problem. Once you have had quality it is hard to downgrade. Air is definitely not an option and OH is adamant. Been looking at the poled Sunncamp Swift deluxe 325 or 390 awning and also the Swift 330 canopy. The prices are not astronomical as so even if we dump it after a year or two not a big loss. We will keep the Izzy for our long stays even though it is a bit of a struggle for us to erectGet a grip B. You and I know nothing can beat an Isabella Magnum for ease of erection, quality and ability to withstand inclement weather 😉😉. I tried the Kampa Air Rallye Air thing. Absolute junk still residing in the loft
The Izzy’s are £2000. At a budget of £500 I’d suggest the OP saves a bit longer or looks for a used Izzy. If quality doesn’t matter…………..🥴🥴🥴
That reminds me I have to clean and lube the awning rail, before the off tomorrow to The Blue Lias.The Izzy roof and little bits is quite light. I pull it through myself with some earlier help with Silicon spray in the awning rail. Far far lighter than the Kampa. A no brainer for me . I may have to buy a new Izzy. Ours has been re sown twice and all still good.Plus it’s one of the few awnings I’ve had in 40,+ years where I can erect it myself👍👍
The poled version is only 6.8kg in weight and I assume that includes the poles. The air version is 10kg so for 4kg the air is definitely off the list. However either way they are worth the price even if they only last 2- 3 years.I have one of these. Can't say it's worse or better than any others as it's the only one I've had. I can put it up on my own easily enough. One web site said 7 minutes....dream on..... but less than 30 minutes from out of the bag, and pegging it out completely, including ground sheet.
So far very satisfied with it.
They do larger ones I think.
Sunncamp

The condensation is our main concern. We did have a Kampa air awning ages ago and the condensation was horrendous even when you left both doors open. Like a rainfall first thing in the morning.The only shortcoming of the lightweight porch was that it had condensation drip from the roof in late autumn through to early spring. The Isabella or subsequent Dorema porch didn’t suffer. I seem to recall previous threads where other lightweights suffered similarly and owners bought inner liners with mixed views.
We brought a roof lining for our Sunncamp porch awning it was greatThe condensation is our main concern. We did have a Kampa air awning ages ago and the condensation was horrendous even when you left both doors open. Like a rainfall first thing in the morning.
As you mention, inner liners apparently resolve the issue, but we never tried one opting to sell the Kampa awning after only a few uses and bought the Izzy. Not sure if you cna buy a roof lining for the Sunncamp awnings?
Our 260 Air weighs just under 8kg not including the pump.The poled version is only 6.8kg in weight and I assume that includes the poles. The air version is 10kg so for 4kg the air is definitely off the list. However either way they are worth the price even if they only last 2- 3 years.
We brought a roof lining for our Sunncamp porch awning it was great
My Kampa is still in the loft. Whilst the additional ceiling liner helped it didn’t solve the condensation issue which really bugged us,never mind the four failures of air bladders.The condensation is our main concern. We did have a Kampa air awning ages ago and the condensation was horrendous even when you left both doors open. Like a rainfall first thing in the morning.
As you mention, inner liners apparently resolve the issue, but we never tried one opting to sell the Kampa awning after only a few uses and bought the Izzy. Not sure if you cna buy a roof lining for the Sunncamp awnings?