yedi
Observer
I've got about 85 nights in my medium Maggiolina AirTop Black Storm now, so I wanted to post my impressions of the tent. I've used the tent in nighttime temperatures from the low 30s to the high 90s and everywhere from the Canadian Rockies to the Mojave Desert. (Note: I have not used the tent in winter conditions. I hope to do so this winter, and I'll update the review then, but for now, this is a three-season review.)
I found threads here on ExPo to be particularly useful when I was considering buying an AirTop, so I thought I'd try to add to the collective knowledge. I know it's hard for people to plunk down the cash for these tents without ever seeing them (or at least it was for me), so I'll try to be as thorough as possible and give a virtual tour and then post my impressions. I'll try to touch on each category that I was interested in before purchasing the tent. If I've left anything out, or if anyone has questions or wants pictures of things I haven't put up, let me know and I'll try to answer or get some pictures. I'm splitting this review up into multiple parts to get as many pictures as I can.
Ordering: Ordering was very easy. I simply called up AutoHome and spoke with Mike Spies. He gave me an estimate for the shipping costs while on the phone, and I received an invoice via e-mail then next day. The tent shipped the day after I spoke with Mike.
Price: $3,499 for the tent. Crating was another $100, and shipping from AutoHome's distributor in Nevada to a terminal near me (VA) was another $450. All told, it was $4,049.
Shipping/Delivery: The box showed up at the shipping facility about a week after I ordered it. (AutoHome had one in stock when I ordered. If the model you're interested in is not in stock, it may take longer.) Unfortunately, when it arrived, the box had been punched through during the shipping process (the crate is actually a wooden exoskeleton that goes around just the edges of a heavy duty cardboard box).
The cardboard had been punched through and the top of the tent was scraped up. I wasn't too worried about it, though, because the scratches were superficial and after some rubbing with fiberglass restorer, they mostly came out. It was definitely irritating to get a brand new tent and have to go to work on it with fiberglass restorer.
Initial Mounting: I mounted the tent on a Tacoma with an ARE CX cap. Initially, I used two Yakima bars spaced about a quarter of the way in from the front and back of the tent. This seemed to work fine in terms of weight distribution when testing it, and I've seen others running Maggiolinas with only two bars, but it made me nervous for the long term. I would have preferred to use three Yakima bars to support my fat ***, but because of the convex nature of the ARE cap, a middle bar would have been about 1/2 inch higher than the other two and wouldn't work. I believe other shells are flatter, as I have seen other people with three bars across the top. The Yakima bars keep the tent a little more than four inches off the top of the shell, and the mounting hardware that comes with the tent is very easy to use.
Final Mounting: Because I was concerned about the cap supporting the tent, me, and the lady long term, I started talking to Kevin at Armor Tech Offroad about fabricating an internal skeleton to support the cap. I wanted something that would bolt into the existing holes in the bed and still allow as much useable space in the bed as possible. He more than delivered, with a solution that supports the roof under each of the feet for the roof bars, tucks in at the edges of the bed, and still allows full functionality of the bed, windoors, and drop down front window.
In order to get the center of gravity as low as possible, I also asked Kevin to fabricate two bars to drop the tent as low as possible to the cap, while still allowing the cap to flex some. These replaced the Yakima bars and dropped the tent about two and 1/2 inches.
I've used this set-up for a little over 19,000 miles and have had no problems at all.
Impact on Driving: When I first picked up the tent, I had the stock TRD suspension on the truck. I could immediately tell a big difference in how the truck handled. The tent weighs 130 pounds, and putting that much weight way up on the roof made things a lot squishier going around corners and turns. I later swapped in Dakkars with the added D29XL leaf and dropped the tent a couple of inches. This made all the difference. The truck feels totally solid going around turns now. I don't even notice it's up there. In terms of gas mileage and noise, I haven't noticed any effect from the tent on either. The tent is no louder than the bare Yakima bars I had on the truck prior to the tent, and I didn't notice any perceptible hit to my mileage.
Construction/Materials/Design: The tent shell is made from graphite-colored, thick fiberglass. The fiberglass is rough on the inside under the mattress.
The tent walls are made from a carbon grey fabric that feels similar to a lightweight canvas. The fabric has a fairly loose weave, which allows you to see pinpricks of light during the day.
(Continued in the next post)
I found threads here on ExPo to be particularly useful when I was considering buying an AirTop, so I thought I'd try to add to the collective knowledge. I know it's hard for people to plunk down the cash for these tents without ever seeing them (or at least it was for me), so I'll try to be as thorough as possible and give a virtual tour and then post my impressions. I'll try to touch on each category that I was interested in before purchasing the tent. If I've left anything out, or if anyone has questions or wants pictures of things I haven't put up, let me know and I'll try to answer or get some pictures. I'm splitting this review up into multiple parts to get as many pictures as I can.
Ordering: Ordering was very easy. I simply called up AutoHome and spoke with Mike Spies. He gave me an estimate for the shipping costs while on the phone, and I received an invoice via e-mail then next day. The tent shipped the day after I spoke with Mike.
Price: $3,499 for the tent. Crating was another $100, and shipping from AutoHome's distributor in Nevada to a terminal near me (VA) was another $450. All told, it was $4,049.
Shipping/Delivery: The box showed up at the shipping facility about a week after I ordered it. (AutoHome had one in stock when I ordered. If the model you're interested in is not in stock, it may take longer.) Unfortunately, when it arrived, the box had been punched through during the shipping process (the crate is actually a wooden exoskeleton that goes around just the edges of a heavy duty cardboard box).
The cardboard had been punched through and the top of the tent was scraped up. I wasn't too worried about it, though, because the scratches were superficial and after some rubbing with fiberglass restorer, they mostly came out. It was definitely irritating to get a brand new tent and have to go to work on it with fiberglass restorer.
Initial Mounting: I mounted the tent on a Tacoma with an ARE CX cap. Initially, I used two Yakima bars spaced about a quarter of the way in from the front and back of the tent. This seemed to work fine in terms of weight distribution when testing it, and I've seen others running Maggiolinas with only two bars, but it made me nervous for the long term. I would have preferred to use three Yakima bars to support my fat ***, but because of the convex nature of the ARE cap, a middle bar would have been about 1/2 inch higher than the other two and wouldn't work. I believe other shells are flatter, as I have seen other people with three bars across the top. The Yakima bars keep the tent a little more than four inches off the top of the shell, and the mounting hardware that comes with the tent is very easy to use.
Final Mounting: Because I was concerned about the cap supporting the tent, me, and the lady long term, I started talking to Kevin at Armor Tech Offroad about fabricating an internal skeleton to support the cap. I wanted something that would bolt into the existing holes in the bed and still allow as much useable space in the bed as possible. He more than delivered, with a solution that supports the roof under each of the feet for the roof bars, tucks in at the edges of the bed, and still allows full functionality of the bed, windoors, and drop down front window.
In order to get the center of gravity as low as possible, I also asked Kevin to fabricate two bars to drop the tent as low as possible to the cap, while still allowing the cap to flex some. These replaced the Yakima bars and dropped the tent about two and 1/2 inches.
I've used this set-up for a little over 19,000 miles and have had no problems at all.
Impact on Driving: When I first picked up the tent, I had the stock TRD suspension on the truck. I could immediately tell a big difference in how the truck handled. The tent weighs 130 pounds, and putting that much weight way up on the roof made things a lot squishier going around corners and turns. I later swapped in Dakkars with the added D29XL leaf and dropped the tent a couple of inches. This made all the difference. The truck feels totally solid going around turns now. I don't even notice it's up there. In terms of gas mileage and noise, I haven't noticed any effect from the tent on either. The tent is no louder than the bare Yakima bars I had on the truck prior to the tent, and I didn't notice any perceptible hit to my mileage.
Construction/Materials/Design: The tent shell is made from graphite-colored, thick fiberglass. The fiberglass is rough on the inside under the mattress.
The tent walls are made from a carbon grey fabric that feels similar to a lightweight canvas. The fabric has a fairly loose weave, which allows you to see pinpricks of light during the day.
(Continued in the next post)
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