Sun 07 Nov, 2010 10:55 pm
Mon 08 Nov, 2010 5:55 am
Mon 08 Nov, 2010 9:39 am
Mon 08 Nov, 2010 9:41 am
Mon 08 Nov, 2010 10:37 am
Mon 08 Nov, 2010 11:16 am
Mon 08 Nov, 2010 11:24 am
Ent wrote:The Akto vestibule is setup so you can cook in it during the most extreme weather, which I have done. The single ended zip of the Scarp and lack of protective hood means you can not, at least in my opinion, but given the presence of Scarp tinkers no doubt I will be told otherwise.
Mon 08 Nov, 2010 11:31 am
photohiker wrote:Good and interesting review.Ent wrote:The Akto vestibule is setup so you can cook in it during the most extreme weather, which I have done. The single ended zip of the Scarp and lack of protective hood means you can not, at least in my opinion, but given the presence of Scarp tinkers no doubt I will be told otherwise.
Now I'm not going to 'tell otherwise' but I'm interested to hear what cooking in a tent during the most extreme weather consists of?
If you are suggesting cooking in the vestibule with the door closed (but vented at the top) then allow me to say that I wouldn't be comfortable or suggest doing that in any of these tents.
Mon 08 Nov, 2010 11:40 am
Mon 08 Nov, 2010 12:04 pm
Mon 08 Nov, 2010 12:48 pm
Mon 08 Nov, 2010 1:22 pm
Mon 08 Nov, 2010 1:24 pm
sthughes wrote:PACKED WEIGHT: MSR Hubba Hubba HP
MSR = 1.9kg
Nallo = 2.3kg
Mon 08 Nov, 2010 1:33 pm
Orion wrote:sthughes wrote:PACKED WEIGHT: MSR Hubba Hubba HP
MSR = 1.9kg
Nallo = 2.3kg
Hmmm?
The manufacturer websites say that they weigh the same: Minimum weight (tent/fly/poles) = 1.9 kg.
http://www.cascadedesigns.com/msr/tents/fast-and-light-tents/hubba-hubba/product
http://estore.websitepros.com/1764795/-strse-75/Nallo-3/Detail.bok
Mon 08 Nov, 2010 1:39 pm
Orion wrote:sthughes wrote:PACKED WEIGHT: MSR Hubba Hubba HP
MSR = 1.9kg
Nallo = 2.3kg
Hmmm?
The manufacturer websites say that they weigh the same: Minimum weight (tent/fly/poles) = 1.9 kg.
http://www.cascadedesigns.com/msr/tents/fast-and-light-tents/hubba-hubba/product
http://estore.websitepros.com/1764795/-strse-75/Nallo-3/Detail.bok
Orion wrote:I looked at the Hubba Hubba but wasn't thrilled with all the mesh on the tent. That wasn't going to fly for snow camping where spin drift can blow through the mesh. And I wasn't sure it was the best choice for our visits to Tasmania either where wind and rain can at times be constant.
Mon 08 Nov, 2010 1:43 pm
Mon 08 Nov, 2010 1:55 pm
Mon 08 Nov, 2010 4:01 pm
Mon 08 Nov, 2010 4:47 pm
Mon 08 Nov, 2010 4:49 pm
Ent wrote:Such conditions are not uncommon to Sweden, home of the Hillebergs, and they are the only tent company I am aware of that makes a point of cooking in their tents, rather than the standard "DO NOT COOK IN THE TENT" common with other brands. The tent material is apparently fire retardant, which means it melt and probably smolder but no Hindenburg.
Mon 08 Nov, 2010 8:26 pm
Mon 08 Nov, 2010 9:34 pm
Mon 08 Nov, 2010 9:36 pm
rucksack wrote:Interesting thread..... in the end, walkers have been going out (and coming back) using tents that have been a hell of a lot worse than any of those compared here and they have had the most fabulous time of it. Sometimes, we lose sight of that.
Maelgwn wrote:How easy is it to enter/exit when without getting the inner wet?
Mon 08 Nov, 2010 9:56 pm
Tue 09 Nov, 2010 3:24 am
Azza wrote:You really need a wind tunnel to assess a tent properly...
I have a Hubba Hubba HP which I consider to be a reasonable light weight tent.
My biggest criticism of the tent is that its stability in high winds isn't the best.
My tents first outing it was almost flattened in gale force winds.
I was struck in the head while laying down by the poles bending in the wind.
I spent half the night holding the poles in place to prevent the tent being ripped to pieces.
Any chance of strong winds the tend must be guyed out perfectly otherwise its at risk.
The side walls tend to push in and form a wind scope / sail. I've added extra guy ropes now to make sure its as bomb proof as it can be.
I quite like the space and the high roof and find it a good tent to take when not sharing the extra space is quite nice for the weight.
I got mine quite cheap - $330USD, personally I'd have felt a bit cheated if I'd paid a lot more based on it performance.
Overall its a pretty good light weight tent.
From what I've seen I quite like the Hilleberg's and would probalby look at getting one of them if I was in the market for a new tent.
Tue 09 Nov, 2010 7:52 am
sthughes wrote:Should be pretty easy. With dual vestibules you just pick the one on the leeward side. Might be worse in the nallo if the rain happens to be coming from that way, but it's a big beatings so I think you would manage fine. Both flys cover the doors so runoff won't go in.
Tue 09 Nov, 2010 9:04 am
Tue 09 Nov, 2010 1:42 pm
Franco wrote:Brett
The car stereo bit is a very good example of seeing the same thing from a different point of view.
What I see is shops like JB HI FI doing a roaring trade in car stereos. I bet that most of them go into new cars that come with a car stereo.
So what happens to the "old" but brand new unit that comes as standard ?
Well it ends up as land fill.
So you may think that it would be funny /unethical not to supply one , I think that it should only be an "extra" and not a standard item....
I am always ready for a good laugh.
I see how you go on about the Hilleberg perfection, yet the Akto is too short for you and the Nallo has already a mod...
(BTW, it isn't set up square in that shot)
Franco
Tue 09 Nov, 2010 1:56 pm
sthughes wrote:MATERIALS: TIED
Both feel like high quality materials. The MSR uses 20 denier ripstop nylon that is Silicon and PU coated on the fly and PU coated on the floor. The Hilleberg uses "Kerlon 1200" Nylon that is siliconised. Not sure what Kerlon 1200 is but it feels much the same to the Hubba Hubba. The floors are both quite good too, the MSR is rated to 10,000mm and the Nallo feels at least as good. The inner of the MSR is DWR coated, I assume the Nallo is also?
Tue 09 Nov, 2010 2:25 pm
crockle wrote:Cheers. It's the "vertical rain falls on part of the inner when door is open" syndrome that drives me crazy . Sighted *still* on some recent US tents.![]()
That such a fatal design flaw gets repeated over and over again leaves me baffled.
And determined not to actually buy one like that - again ..
Ent wrote:Then again some car manufacturers supply no spare wheel
Maelgwn wrote:The Nallo uses a 70-denier PU coated floor, which they rate to only 5000 mm but should be more durable than the 40D used in the MSR. The inner tent is indeed DWR coated on the Nallo also.
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