ExplorerTom
Explorer
I recently spent a very rainy night in my Oztent RV-5. It rained almost constantly through the night- heavy at times. I didn't have too many leaks, but I did have a couple.
One leak was from the door zippers. I did not put out the awning and I think if I did, I don't think it would have leaked here.
The second leak was from the middle section of the canvas on the highest part of the roof. The water just wicked straight through the canvas right there. Not sure if this was condensation or something inherently flawed with the canvas in this area (dirty?). I've used the tent in rain before and not had any leaks. But I think this was the heaviest it's rained on my tent as well. I did not have any panels open for ventilation- Utah, temps in the 40s, 2 people in the tent. I've since read about how others allow for ventilation and I'll try that next time.
It actually dripped from the seam just below the above mentioned section of canvas. Not sure if the seam was leaking or it was just the collection point from above.
Here's the part that worries me the most: when I got home and set the tent up in the garage to let it dry, it was soaked inside. If I shook one leg of the tent, I could hear a bunch of water hitting the inside floor. The canvas was saturated. Granted when we broke camp, the tent was still wet and it was raining during the final steps of getting it in the bag AND it rained/snowed on the drive home. But if I was setting up camp again because I was on a multi night trip, all of those factors could have been true and I would be spending the night in a very wet tent. Anytime the wind shook the tent, droplets would be failing on me.
Any ideas?
I did NOT season the canvas like I should have when I initially got it. I apparently didn't see that note. The tent has always been set up and allowed to dry as soon as I get home if it's been packed away wet. Condensation isn't normally an issue since I primarily camp in CO, UT, WY where humidity is typically super low (unless it's raining).
One leak was from the door zippers. I did not put out the awning and I think if I did, I don't think it would have leaked here.
The second leak was from the middle section of the canvas on the highest part of the roof. The water just wicked straight through the canvas right there. Not sure if this was condensation or something inherently flawed with the canvas in this area (dirty?). I've used the tent in rain before and not had any leaks. But I think this was the heaviest it's rained on my tent as well. I did not have any panels open for ventilation- Utah, temps in the 40s, 2 people in the tent. I've since read about how others allow for ventilation and I'll try that next time.
It actually dripped from the seam just below the above mentioned section of canvas. Not sure if the seam was leaking or it was just the collection point from above.
Here's the part that worries me the most: when I got home and set the tent up in the garage to let it dry, it was soaked inside. If I shook one leg of the tent, I could hear a bunch of water hitting the inside floor. The canvas was saturated. Granted when we broke camp, the tent was still wet and it was raining during the final steps of getting it in the bag AND it rained/snowed on the drive home. But if I was setting up camp again because I was on a multi night trip, all of those factors could have been true and I would be spending the night in a very wet tent. Anytime the wind shook the tent, droplets would be failing on me.
Any ideas?
I did NOT season the canvas like I should have when I initially got it. I apparently didn't see that note. The tent has always been set up and allowed to dry as soon as I get home if it's been packed away wet. Condensation isn't normally an issue since I primarily camp in CO, UT, WY where humidity is typically super low (unless it's raining).