[pct-l] Managing condensation;
Edward Anderson
mendoridered at yahoo.com
Fri Apr 1 18:10:32 CDT 2011
Paul, I never had a condensation problem when I had the rain fly up on my
Hubba tent. It is pretty well ventilated. I didn't often use the rain fly -
only if I wanted privacy or when it was raining or when my barometer indicated
that it might rain or snow. I did have to put it on in the middle of night a
couple of times when I was wrong and it rained. Most often I did not need the
rain fly at all. I did appreciate the netting to keep the insects and other
critters out. And I like to be able to look outside - and to see my horse and
nature all around. I never stored food inside my tent. Those who do sometimes
have rodents chew there way in.
MendoRider
________________________________
From: Paul Robison <paulrobisonhome at yahoo.com>
To: pctl <Pct-l at backcountry.net>
Sent: Fri, April 1, 2011 8:07:37 AM
Subject: [pct-l] Managing condensation;
Hello all,
So last year I did a double walled tent and it was pretty straight forward;
take the fly off and shake lime he'll ( it would be soaked top and bottom, but
nothing would get In the mesh part of the tent.
This year we are trying a hybrid tarptent; which is roomy; airy; but last
night got covered in condensation, inside and out.
We had he whole thing sealed up, flaps closed, vestibules closed... To try and
keep some cold out... But it ended up being a sheet of frost outside and
significant ice inside...
Obviously in warm weather just leave the vestibules drawn back... But any good
tips for the cold nights (last year we'd be in the 20's F.) to manage keeping
cold out and not filling with water inside.
Our quilt was PLENTY warm so if we need to just leave the vestibules open to the
winter wind let me know,
Thanks so much for any feedback and advice,
Paul
Sent from my iPod
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