Mutley wrote:I have owned a one planet goondie for a while now and have now spent about 14 days in it. It pitches very quickly
Strider wrote:Mutley wrote:I have owned a one planet goondie for a while now and have now spent about 14 days in it. It pitches very quickly
You've obviously never pitched a Tarptent!![]()
I helped my mate pitch his Goondie a couple of weeks ago and was amazed at the complication. We spent probably 5 minutes tweaking and the fly still didn't fit properly.
I helped my mate pitch his Goondie a couple of weeks ago and was amazed at the complication. We spent probably 5 minutes tweaking and the fly still didn't fit properly.
Mutley wrote:I helped my mate pitch his Goondie a couple of weeks ago and was amazed at the complication. We spent probably 5 minutes tweaking and the fly still didn't fit properly.
Throw fly over, 4 clips and 2 pegs...too easy. Nothing complex at all.
Spartan wrote:protestations from the 'scarptent evangelists' not withstanding
Lophophaps wrote:Strider, thanks for the link. The Macrolight that I put up was a bit of a struggle, which I attributed to me not knowing the best way and the inner being attached. This was a dry tent in a sheltered place, not The Main Range last week. So it very much appears that the Macrolight can be eliminated.
It seems that the short poles at the ends give a degree of stability, sort of partway between a single pole and crossover design that does not have these short poles. Do the crossover poles fit into clips or are they threaded in sleeves?
The weight of the Scarp 2 single pole and crossover pole with solid fabric inside are good: maybe 1800 and 2025 gram. I’ll have a look at the Drifter 2. More thinking. Not good.
One these points are resolved, the questions then are how necessary are the Scarp 2 crossover poles for exposed camping, where can they be bought and for how much?
Scottyk wrote:Spartan wrote:protestations from the 'scarptent evangelists' not withstanding
Three cheers for Scarp Tents!
My advice is that when a manufacturer makes tents very light they don't do it from magic, they do it from clever design (allows use of less fabric and poles) and by using lighter fabric. So the lighter the tent gets the lighter the material has to become to make the weight disappear.
So although some tents may look a little heavy compared to some of the super light ones, the designers of these tents aren't stupid they are putting there compromise pendulum a little further back towards the durability scale. So....
I vote for Hillberg, Wilderness Equipment or Macpac for tent makers that I think have the durability to weight balance about right. I am a person that doesn't mind carrying a few extra grams in my pack to know I have durable gear.
I can feel myself ducking now in preparation of responses
Lophophaps wrote:I'm assessing Drifter 2. Metric units would be useful.[/color]
Mutley wrote:Fyi This months Wild magazine has a tent review.
vagrom wrote:Erk... Just looked at said tent review. Where's Macpac?
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