rino
Supporting Sponsor - OK4WD
This is a great conversation. Thanks everyone. I was at OK4W last Friday, and ordered the Alu-cab tent. ( I assure you, I went back and forth between these and the James Baroud) The folks in the store where great ( thanks Ryan) and I am excited. I am about to call and add the Shadow awing and walls, but I am trying to figure out an issue. This is a matter of great importance to my marriage.
I am willing to have something fabricated, (if someone could point me in the right direction), that would allow direct covered access from the RTT into an "annex" of some kind, for rainy days and midnight callings, that I can the connect into the Shadow Awning . Yes i know about the Baroud tunnel, but I preferred the Alu-Cab tents and the shadow awning. I can't be the only person thinking this is possible.
I thank you for your suggestions.
First off, thanks for visiting the shop and hope you enjoyed your time with us!
The James Baroud tunnel would not fit the Expedition III due to size difference in the tents, the extrusion of the lid and the height. But the EXP III has the rear awning for foul weather entry that works really well. I would consider this as a entry for foul weather and the side for fair weather if you are running the Shadow Awn.
fair enough, but they have to be able to attach to other companies products. You see it on other vehilcles.
Anyways, I’m on the verge of purchasing an alucab gen 3 to replace my JB rtt and debating getting the awning with it. I have a few issues with the design if the tent though.
1. Fabric folding down
2. Horrible ladder design, never understood why i need to out the dirty ladder into the tent and also shoukd be telescoping or similar to the JB ladder.
3. Mattress, although I can buy a topper if need be. Not sure why for the price if all these tents a but extra cannot be spent on mattress quality.
What have others done about these? Or are they a none issue? I should have went with the Alucab from the start, it is what I originally wanted. But the above issues pushed me to the JB. Now that i no longer have the JB I’m back to the drawing board.
Appreciate any feedback or pointing me in the right direction. So far it hasn’t popped up in my search. I see people switch out ladders, but the fabric for me is the big one.
Steve
The fabric folding down I too thought was odd but once you use it, it makes much more sense. You can control the privacy and airflow and it eliminates the need for additional zippers. The key is to roll them nicely and tuck them between the mattress and tent body, not much different then rolling up and strapping.
I would disagree on the ladder design. It is built to be solid, robust and survive the harshest environments. While a telescoping ladder may work best for your needs here, the same cannot be said for in the dust and corrugated roads found around the world. The ladder is also supplied in a heavy canvas storage bag so you do not dirty your bedding, along with a second mount allowing dual entry if you choose on the tent. Lastly, if a telescoping ladder is a must, the mount can be unbolted from the ladder and with three 6mm bolts be installed onto the ladder of your choice.
The mattress used is a 3" high density foam with a zip cover over 1" polyethylene closed-cell foam. What would you suggest as an upgrade?
There are advantages to the shadow awning, I love the 270 degree fold out, but those advantages come with certain requirements, like a very strong mount for the pivot end. Kind of like 40" tires need bigger axles.....
Yea, you have to fold the fabric walls when closing the tent to make sure they dont get caught in the gas struts, or in the area where the seal contacts. Some tents have a bungee from wall to wall for this, but honestly hooking that up would be more work then just tucking the fabric with your hands. Takes about an extra 5 seconds per side.
Ladder works awesome for me. I leave it in the bed of the truck.
I put a topper from Target on my original mattress. There is only so much space in there. Between the thick sleeping bag, pillows, and topper thats about all i can fit and sitll get the lid closed without sitting on it. I would love a 12" foam mattress like I put in my toyhauler, but i think that the tent would look a little silly if it was 18" tall. Plus it wouldnt be "camping" anymore. That said, any RTT is ~100x nicer than sleeping on the ground.
Well said as always