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Welcome
to Tom Donney Motors |
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Introducing the

I have purchased a '67 "SAABO",
Saab's early 60's Caravan, from a friend in Sweden, and here is its story...
**UPDATE**
The SaabO now has a new home in Massachusetts with Peter Maitland. Peter and his brother Dave did the unthinkable driving Peter's 1968 Saab wagon from Mass to Washington state for the SOC then, stopped by Iowa on the return trip and pick-up his new SaabO and towed it behind his '68 wagon back to Mass!!! This a no small feat. The wind drag of a SaabO is incredible!!
Good on ya Peter & Dave!!
Saab made a brief excursion into the caravan-building business in the early
1960s. The Saab caravan - called the Saabo - was intended to serve as a product
that would even out the workload at the Saab helicopter department, whose
main task at the time was to assemble helicopters manufactured in France.
The Saabo caravan was very lightweight. The body alone weighed no more than
80 kg (176 lb). It was designed for towing by very small cars, and the Swedish
regulations for caravans at that time favored very lightweight vans. The length
of the caravan (without hitch) was 2.74 m (9 ft), the width was 1.84 m (6
ft), and the overall height was 2.10 m (7 ft). The headroom in the caravan
was 1.80 m (5 ft 9 in).
The first 50 production caravans were not fitted with brakes, since these
did not become mandatory in Sweden until the mid-1960s. The prototype of the
Saabo caravan was made by Fisksätra boatyard, and the pre-production
batch of three caravans was built by another boatyard - Marieholms Bruk.
The Saabo caravan was sensibly designed, since the front and rear windows
were so low that the driver of the towing car had backward vision right through
the caravan. The interior fittings included two sofas, a dining table, galley
sink and two wardrobes, and the caravan could sleep four (five with an extra
bunk). Gas was used for cooking, heating and lighting. When launched in 1963,
the cost of the caravan was SEK 4950 (US $850). About 400 Saabo caravans were
manufactured, and more than 30 are still registered in Sweden.