Fiamma’s Deep Black Carry-Bike Range Signals Where Campervan Accessories Are Heading

NEWSCARAVANS, MOTORHOMES & CAMPERVANS

Will Hawkins

6/26/20253 min read

minivan bike carrier fiamma black
minivan bike carrier fiamma black

Fiamma has expanded its Carry-Bike range for vans with a new Deep Black finish across several model-specific and modular bike carriers. On the surface, this looks like a cosmetic update. Look closer, and it’s a signal about how campervan usage — and buyer expectations — are evolving.

This isn’t about paint. It’s about how bikes, vans and lifestyle travel now intersect.


Here's the break down.

What Fiamma Has Actually Done (Beyond the Aesthetics)

Fiamma has refreshed and expanded its van-mounted bike carrier lineup across four key product families:

  • Carry-Bike Ford Custom V710 – Designed specifically for post-2023 Ford Transit Custom models, no drilling required, supports up to four standard bikes or two e-bikes, with adjustable rail positions.

  • Carry-Bike VW T5/T6 Pro – Delivered fully assembled, telescopic rail system up to 76cm, tool-free installation using supplied brackets.

  • Carry-Bike DJ – A modular system using a single carrier body with vehicle-specific fixing bars for Ducato, Sprinter, Crafter and Transit platforms.

  • Carry-Bike Frame – A similar modular concept, but using stainless steel rail bases and dedicated frames per vehicle type.


Across the range, three things are consistent:

  • No drilling installations

  • Tailgate access remains possible when bikes are removed

  • Adjustable rail heights to suit different van layouts and door geometries


The Deep Black finish is the visual hook — but the real story is vehicle-specific fit, modularity, and e-bike readiness.

What This Means for the UK Campervan Market

For UK campervan dealers and converters, this has three implications.

1. Ford Transit Custom Is Being Treated as a Core Platform


Fiamma’s dedicated solution for the 2023+ Transit Custom confirms what the market already knows: this van is no longer a secondary option behind VW — it’s a primary platform.


Accessory manufacturers don’t build bespoke systems unless demand is locked in.

2. Modular Systems Are Becoming the Default


The Carry-Bike DJ and Frame systems point to a clear direction of travel:

  • One core product

  • Vehicle-specific interfaces

  • Reduced SKU sprawl


This benefits suppliers, dealers and consumers — but only if sales teams can explain the differences clearly.

3. E-Bike Weight Is Now Assumed


Supporting two e-bikes is no longer a premium feature. It’s table stakes.


Any campervan retailer still treating e-bike compatibility as an “upgrade” is already behind.

The Bigger Signal

This isn’t just about bike carriers.


It’s about how accessories are becoming part of the core campervan proposition, not a bolt-on after the sale. Manufacturers who understand vehicle platforms, weight limits, door mechanics and buyer behaviour will win.

Those who don’t will be relegated to the clearance rack.


The signal is clear: Campervans are being sold as mobility systems, not just vehicles — and accessories are now part of that system architecture.

Ignore that, and you’re selling yesterday’s product to today’s buyer.

Why This Matters to the Industry

Accessories are no longer an afterthought in the campervan buying journey. They’re part of the decision-making process from day one.


Bike carriers sit at the intersection of:

  • Active travel

  • Short-break touring

  • Urban-compatible campervan ownership


That matters because modern campervan buyers aren’t asking:

“Can I add a bike rack later?”


They’re asking:

“Will this van work for how I travel?”


Fiamma’s approach reflects a wider industry truth: generic accessories are losing ground to vehicle-specific systems. Buyers want reassurance on fit, usability, and compatibility — especially with heavier e-bikes and electrically assisted cargo.

This is the accessories market getting more technical, not more decorative.

Why This Is Significant for Consumers

For buyers, this shift delivers three real-world benefits:

  • Cleaner installs – No drilling, no permanent vehicle modification

  • Better usability – Adjustable rail heights reduce loading strain and clearance issues

  • Future-proofing – Modular systems allow upgrades when vehicles or travel habits change


The Deep Black finish matters too — not because it’s fashionable, but because it aligns accessories visually with modern campervan aesthetics. Buyers increasingly expect accessories to look integrated, not bolted-on.

That expectation isn’t going away.