Hey all I've been crawling rokslide looking at tent threads and just wanted to make one to address/compare what I consider the top contenders for 2 man non-freestanding 3/4 season tents.
Background is I have an old sierra designs 2 man that is heavy as hell (even if comfy) so I've been using my OR Alpine bivy a lot lately. I recently had a bear scare (false alarm) and was really frustrated by how slow the bivy is to exit plus my inability to sit up, look around, and draw my pistol. The bivy also has other drawbacks including condensation and lack of comfort for extended stays plus no vestibules.
Now I'm in the market for something around the same weight (or lighter) than my bivy while providing 2 man+ room, vestibules, and the option to run a mesh liner and floor. Looking at non-freestanding designs that use trekking poles specifically. The three top contenders I'm seeing are:
-Seek Outside Eolus ($405, Sil/PU 30D nylon, 42oz, 62/30 sqft)
-Dan Durston X-Mid 2 ($300, Sil/PEU 20D Polyester, 39oz 62/32 sqft)
-Tarptent Stratospire Li ($640, DCF, 29oz, unknown/27 sqft)
Obviously these all run the gambit in terms of price as well as significant weight difference, but functionally they are all very similar and structurally they all use a similar principle of trekking-pole-supported fly and optional liner. What's going to make a decisions for me is:
- weight (favors stratospire Li @ 29 oz)
- price (favors X-Mid 2 @ $300)
- storm resilience (I believe favors Eolus)
- waterproofness (favors Stratospire @ 8,000mm)
- durability (favors Stratospire with DCF)
- late season serviceability in cold/snow (I believe favors X-Mid 2)
I'm just looking for opinions and first hand experiences with these shelters. Qualitative traits matter like ergonomics, small features, ease of set up and customer support. There's a lot of people raving over the little features in the X-Mid 2 and it's ease of set up. I'm ok with spending the extra $200-$300 on a shelter if it gets me a significantly better shelter but if it's kind of a wash I'd rather save the money. Primarily will be used for colorado remote backpacking and remote bowhunting. I'm open to other stuff too, I see hexpeak is doing cool stuff too and I'd eventually like a hot tent for similar uses.
Any input?
Background is I have an old sierra designs 2 man that is heavy as hell (even if comfy) so I've been using my OR Alpine bivy a lot lately. I recently had a bear scare (false alarm) and was really frustrated by how slow the bivy is to exit plus my inability to sit up, look around, and draw my pistol. The bivy also has other drawbacks including condensation and lack of comfort for extended stays plus no vestibules.
Now I'm in the market for something around the same weight (or lighter) than my bivy while providing 2 man+ room, vestibules, and the option to run a mesh liner and floor. Looking at non-freestanding designs that use trekking poles specifically. The three top contenders I'm seeing are:
-Seek Outside Eolus ($405, Sil/PU 30D nylon, 42oz, 62/30 sqft)
-Dan Durston X-Mid 2 ($300, Sil/PEU 20D Polyester, 39oz 62/32 sqft)
-Tarptent Stratospire Li ($640, DCF, 29oz, unknown/27 sqft)
Obviously these all run the gambit in terms of price as well as significant weight difference, but functionally they are all very similar and structurally they all use a similar principle of trekking-pole-supported fly and optional liner. What's going to make a decisions for me is:
- weight (favors stratospire Li @ 29 oz)
- price (favors X-Mid 2 @ $300)
- storm resilience (I believe favors Eolus)
- waterproofness (favors Stratospire @ 8,000mm)
- durability (favors Stratospire with DCF)
- late season serviceability in cold/snow (I believe favors X-Mid 2)
I'm just looking for opinions and first hand experiences with these shelters. Qualitative traits matter like ergonomics, small features, ease of set up and customer support. There's a lot of people raving over the little features in the X-Mid 2 and it's ease of set up. I'm ok with spending the extra $200-$300 on a shelter if it gets me a significantly better shelter but if it's kind of a wash I'd rather save the money. Primarily will be used for colorado remote backpacking and remote bowhunting. I'm open to other stuff too, I see hexpeak is doing cool stuff too and I'd eventually like a hot tent for similar uses.
Any input?