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[Closed] Backpacking tents

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Wow, whats been going on here then :(. I popped out for a meal and all hell lets loose. Thanks guys for your advice about your tents. Oh and what did that chap say about me ?


 
Posted : 21/02/2009 11:41 pm
 Smee
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I just said that It is a wee bit silly to light a stove and cook in a tent.


 
Posted : 21/02/2009 11:45 pm
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Oh well thats alright then ๐Ÿ˜‰


 
Posted : 21/02/2009 11:50 pm
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I saw one go up in flames at the Kimm in 2006

Smee - I am assuming that you were competing in the KIMM in 2006? What cooker did you use outside of your tent on the saturday night which was able to handle the howling gale that was blowing?

I took my life in my hands and cooked inside my tent, as I have always done, in the warm and dry, in my warm kit.


 
Posted : 22/02/2009 12:10 am
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Anyway backpacking tents, as said above Mac Pac Mineret is a great tent which combines being robust, spacious and pretty light, great for a two person backpacking trip. However if going off on your own (which I love) lighter options are available.. and yes I know I am taking a risk by going off on me own, but I accept the risk in the same way I accept the risk of making my coffee when lay in my tent. I'm a reckless mother****er!!!


 
Posted : 22/02/2009 12:18 pm
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FWIW I camped opposite Sir Ranulph Fiennes at KIMM 2002 (he was running with a mate of mine), and they, like us were cooking in the porch of their tent. I've always done that - you just have to take care. How dangerous it is does also of course depend on the type of stove - I suspect we were both using hex blocks which don't have the same tendency to flare up.

Not sure how useful my tent advice would be - currently have a Polaris Shelter for use in MMs/Polaris, but that's a silly minimalist single skin thing and no longer available anyway. Used to have a Saunders Jetpacker+ (lost it at some point) which I liked a lot - that or the Spacepacker are still decent tents and good value. I think if I was buying a more normal tent now though I'd go for some variety of TN Laser.


 
Posted : 22/02/2009 1:29 pm
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Spacepackers are fantastic tents (I wish I hadn't sold mine). Roomy enough for two, and two big porches so you can have gear in one and space for cooking in the other.


 
Posted : 22/02/2009 4:35 pm
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Thanks for the spacepacker lead, the "plus" version is neat, light and has more room in the inner. How stable do we think it is with one pole.


 
Posted : 22/02/2009 5:18 pm
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Very stable tents. Very robust too. For best effectiveness, pitch it so that the pole is parallel to the wind.

To reduce pegging, I fitted some shock-cord loops to the pegging point on the inners, then just hooked them over the pegs for the outer. As long as they're long enough, you'll still have enough separation.


 
Posted : 22/02/2009 5:56 pm
 Smee
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Beamers - same stove I always use - MSR whisperlite. If it gets windy use a windshield - doh.


 
Posted : 22/02/2009 6:17 pm
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Thanks for the tip about the windshield. I think I'll cook in the warmth of my tent though thanks.


 
Posted : 22/02/2009 6:50 pm
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Druidh, good tip thanks, Can anyone point me in the direction of any stockists of the spacepacker plus mk1 as google doesn't want to be my friend on this ๐Ÿ™ or does Robert Saunders not use any other stockists ?


 
Posted : 22/02/2009 7:24 pm
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Spa cycles sell them.


 
Posted : 22/02/2009 11:04 pm
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Why would my tent catch on fire? or is it more a suffocation thing?


 
Posted : 23/02/2009 3:06 am
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A tent could obviously catch fire if, saythe stove flared up for some reason, if the stove was accidentally knocked over or if a loose tent flap was blown into the flame. Modern tent materials are quite flammable! The suffocation issue is also present, though not as much of a problem in a well-ventilatd porch.


 
Posted : 23/02/2009 3:25 am
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I had a bbq in a tent once.


 
Posted : 23/02/2009 4:11 am
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Don't like the spacepacker myself - I had one a while back and if you are over 6ft you tend to sleep with a face full of inner tent fabric (you are inline with the pole).

My suggestion - Lightwave. They do an excellent range of tents which are light, spacious and damn robust. Got a T2 XT myself which gives a massive porch for storeage and cooking (if that is your bag) - you can even get mountain bikes in there, yet it weighs and packs smaller than my old Vaude MkIII by about 1/3. The non-XT version is smaller and lighter again.

They also do a semi-geodesic version for folk that way inclined, and the sister company Crux do a full on geodesic that weighs bolloxall.


 
Posted : 23/02/2009 8:12 am
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Oh aye - Saunders only sell direct. If you want to see one then they are often displaying at Mountain Marathons and the like.


 
Posted : 23/02/2009 8:13 am
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My 2p's worth for the original post

I used a MSR hubber hubber 2 for 9 mounths round OZ last year.

best tent i've used in 15 years(for my conditions )


 
Posted : 23/02/2009 8:57 am
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Ok, following on from the advice on here we've narrowed it down to two - the spacepacker plus mk1 and the MSR hubba hubba hp. Just got to find the best prices now. Thanks for your assistance.


 
Posted : 23/02/2009 6:53 pm
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Stability and lack of flaring tendency are the reasons I use my trangia with meths still, I have always cooked in the porch of my tent, though I'd never advise new campers to do so. But then I wouldnt expect new campers to be out in a gale, and anything less just requires a raincoat and getting chilly. I have seen a fire with an old tent and sleeping bag (young, evenings drinking round an open camp fire while mate was in a sleeping bag). He was quite lucky in that he managed to escape quickly but the bag self-extinguished with only a 6" burn hole and the tent only melted the whole panel and stopped at the seams. I think fabric tents (old cotton type) might actually be worse as they tend to go up like a bonfire!


 
Posted : 23/02/2009 7:45 pm
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