I've had the s.o. lbo, the lunar solo, a few big Agnes and a few tap tents... My latest shelter I am really looking is the dan durston xmid. Double wall, inner 2# check it out.
OP Seems like if you are in the desert then the REI single wall or say the Nemo first lite single wall would do you good, but you'd be limited with condensation issues taking it elsewhere.
Yep for a double wall the Nemo Hornet seems great, for a little less $$ but a few more ounces Outdoor Vitals has the footprint included. REI Quarter Dome SL series seems nice also, little cheaper, a little heavier but has a nicer outdoor color vs the Nemo. REI is nice cause of their guarantee and you can bring stuff back to their stores if it ever breaks.I run the Nemo hornet 2. Im new to the backpacking world but i took it on my first western hunt last year and I loved it. easy to set up and pack away. Comes in at 2.6 OZ with everything. REI also has it on sale for 277 right now. footprint not included but I carry tyvex sheets with me for footprints or meat care.
Yep for a double wall the Nemo Hornet seems great, for a little less $$ but a few more ounces Outdoor Vitals has the footprint included. REI Quarter Dome SL series seems nice also, little cheaper, a little heavier but has a nicer outdoor color vs the Nemo. REI is nice cause of their guarantee and you can bring stuff back to their stores if it ever breaks.
It is 1 year. Still very generous.I think the REI warranty is reduced to a year now from date of purchase. Makes their gear a bit less desirable.
I run the Nemo hornet 2. Im new to the backpacking world but i took it on my first western hunt last year and I loved it. easy to set up and pack away. Comes in at 2.6 OZ with everything. REI also has it on sale for 277 right now. footprint not included but I carry tyvex sheets with me for footprints or meat care.
Those look like nice tents. Unfortunately don’t think my pad will fit in there. I’m 6’1” and have the longer 78” pad.
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Great details - thanks."5X the waterproof rating and 5X tear strength of 30D ripstop. It will hold up to whatever you throw at it. But maybe you know something that I don't. Dyneema is the strongest fiber in the world."
DCF/dyneema does have an extremely high tear strength and is extremely waterproof (when new), but those attributes don't translate to "bombproof" nor super waterproof tent. DCF has quite a few "achilles heels" which prevent that. These include:
1) It's non-woven so it has low puncture resistance. Decent hail can go right through 0.5oz DCF, as do sharp sticks etc. It's nowhere near as puncture resistant as a 20-30D woven.
2) It has low abrasion resistance because the outer layers are just super light mylar (plastic, basically space blanket stuff). Some companies are using the 0.5 or 0.7oz DCF as floor material, but it's not in the same ballpark for lifespan as a 20-30D woven nylon/poly. Not an issue for the fly unless you end up pitching it rubbing on bushes. The heavier 1 - 1.2oz DCF still doesn't last as long as a 30D nylon floor despite weighing about the same and costing 5x as much.
3) DCF stretches on the diagonal (relative to the dyneema strands), where high loading permanently warps the material. That results in a wrinkly pitch thereafter, like this.
4) As a result of #3, along with torsion from packing it up and strain from general use/winds etc, the outer mylar layers form micro-pinholes/micro-cracks and start to bubble/delaminate over time. So even though the material is highly waterproof when new, it degrades much faster than a woven. A good 30D woven might start out out at 3000mm HH and still tests at 1500 mm a few years later, while DCF might start at 8000mm but can easily test at 200 mm a few years later and leak readily.
Because of #1 - 4, DCF is very strong but does not make for a tent that is more bombproof/durable/waterproof than a good woven. Companies that make tents in both will normally tell you their woven versions last much longer (e.g. MLD). I like DCF - it's a really cool material - but it should be seen as a compromise between durability and weight, and not as a way of getting a shelter that is both lighter and tougher. You should only be buying it because you value the weight savings heavily. Otherwise there's not a strong case for it. Compared to a 30D woven, a DCF shelter will be bulkier to pack, shorter lifespan, more prone to puncture/abrasion damage, less waterproof over time, translucent, get spark holes a lot easier, and much more expensive.