by Area54 » Sun 17 Jul, 2011 4:27 pm
The inner is attached to the fly via corner straps and ring and pin connection. The inner remains attached to fly the when pitching and packing. The poles attach to the outside of the fly, so you can completely remove the inner for tarptent use, just need to plan the pegs as the inner gives the floorplan shape, however I'm told there is a factory footprint available which would eliminate the guesswork and experimentation with peg placement when pitching as tarptent.
The longest pole section is 335mm, this will be the limiting factor with dimensions, however you could pack these separately and stuff the tent into a stuffsack - will try this in a few of my stuffsacks to give an idea of compressed tent fabric volume sans poles.
Pitching instructions were easy enough (if a little vague, maybe just the genglish translation), read them once but honestly, once you take it out of the bag it required very little thought. Peg out one end, attach ridge pole, peg out other end, add end poles, fine adjust peg placement, tune internal straps for inner tub. Nothing complex about the components on this design.
Isoma, I was glad for the rain, as that's one of my preferences to have a nice dry space to reside in should the rain persist all day when riding. I really wanted a tent I could pitch in the rain and wind, then transfer my gear straight into the tent without having to go through a lengthy process of drying the inner. As the inner is attached to the fly, I set this up straight onto wet grass, taking very little care with placement - just took out of bag, shook it in the air, dropped it, pegged one end a pitched it. Inner did not contact ground, just the tub and bottom edges of the fly, so a big tick for ease of setup in rain and keeping inner dry, IN THEORY and LIMITED TESTING at this point.
There is a lot of space between the fly and the inner, covered vents at both ends so should provide a lot of ventilation, condensation YMMV. For 1 person, it is luxury. Fair sized vestibule. With fly door open, inner is still sheltered from light rain in no wind, with dry space in vestibule. Be best to place pack inside though - there's plenty of room for it - given the very lightweight nature of the fabric, a heavy pack falling over on it could render some serious damage.
Okay, just stuffed the tent into a 2L s&s roll top drybag. Expelled a fair amount of air, then rolled the top down 2 times. 150mm x 230mm x 100mm ovalised nugget of tentiness.
Any more questions I'm happy to answer, take particular pics etc. I won't provide comparison to other tents as everyones experience differs with other tents, can only provide facts in front of me and what I wanted in a tent. Didn't want to get into a full review - time poor and rather be out riding than typing...
Once I've had it out in the field I can report more facts and report from experience based testing. Great Ocean Road and Otways in August should be windy, rainy and cold.
Gold is just a windy Kansas wheatfield, blue is just a Kansas summer sky...