corvus wrote:Gees we do get a bit technical what with denier , waterhead ,DWR coating ,rain ingress.vapour egress,wind shear,snow shed ,footprint or none,taught or not,square or askew,long or short,wide or narrow,tall or not, how heavy, even reference to to the old style A frame
Ahh !! life is perfect we are all different, seem to like similar things have diverse income streams love variety and come together in this forum to discuss things without rancour or even knicker twisting, got to love it
c
Hi Corvus
I've really been hanging out for your opinion on the Nallo in comparison to the Snowcave.
From the original post,
The Snow Cave is well over 3kg and quite old. It is a roomy and bombproof design. Two vestibules and with 3 hoops and ridge pole - bring on your worst mother nature! I suspect with modern materials this tent could get under 3kg, and as such would be a great heavy weather tent.
Surprised it hasn't been recreated by now. Thought I'd ask you, as you are also familiar with the Snowcave.
I think the Nallo comes close, one vestibule instead of 2 but I'm used to that and the one vestibule is big enough that I don't need 2. I like the way the inner easily pulls back to make a bigger vestibule for cooking, not fiddling with velcro straps on the Snowcave. And the colour coded poles putting the Nallo up makes it those few seconds quicker, also the offset opening where the poles slide in so the opening can be easily found.
Quick to put up anyhow, 2 pegs at the back, slide the poles in & hook into cups, pull tight from the front & peg it down, now it's ready to get in while the ropes are done and the pole straps are tightened on the side.
This is a great write up and I bet it gets a lot of hits worldwide when the Google bots get their teeth into it. Wish I was there to view the comparisons myself, being familiar with 2 of them.