vintageracer
To Infinity and Beyond!
You will NEVER have properly "Dressed" Truck or SUV unless you have a tent on da roof.
Silly folks you should know that by now!
Silly folks you should know that by now!
Look up the Crua AER. Not exactly 40 pounds, but meant to be used on the roof or ground.I'm an early advocate. Roof tents don't hit the mark. Most all of them, OK al roof tents today are derived from expedition tents and unless you are going of some sort of long voyage, are too expensive, too heavy, too complex, ..... and not convenient by my standards. Oh, and the ladders at too heavy and suck. Sorry to rain on the parade, but the critics on YouTube are pointing out the obvious.
Now that i had my little rant, I see a huge opportunity out there. We have been concentrating on making cheaper versions of existing tents. I would love to have a 40 pound three season tent that attaches directly to the rails on my car's roof, can be quickly taken off to put on the ground, or put back in the garage. Possible?
Look up the Crua AER. Not exactly 40 pounds, but meant to be used on the roof or ground.
Sorry to crash the party as I have no opinion or RTT’s but I am intrigued by this sentence. Do you have pics in any threads here?
You wanted to see a tent-cot repurposed as an RTT? Here's my Cabela's double tent cot mounted on top of my lil' home-made trailer (same principle applies if you wanted to mount it on top of a vehicle; you would just need to purchase a ladder and figure a way to secure it).Thank you, an excellent start, clever use of materials, but still derivative. They have made several excellent choices in materials, I love the advanced fabrics and ventilation.
The use of the corner struts is very '50s, everyone went with the ladder as a compression strut but I can see how you can save weight on the base if you have the struts. Folks lose and forget stuff like this, don't ask me how I know. Personally, I would prefer a zip on vestibule to save weight. They certainly know their way around making tents but still too heavy for one person to put on and take off a vehicle.
i'd love to see something really off the wall, like a hammock, or maybe a bear burrito (Tent Cot) or even a covered zero gravity chair but re-imagined for use with a vehicle. I'm dating myself, back in the 60's outdoor equipment was really difficult to get and expensive. There were lots of "kit' manufacturers like Frostline kits that would gather the difficult to obtain fabrics and designs and allow you to do the assembly thereby saving half the cost with the added benefit of teaching you the skills.
Hi all!
My Desert Dawg tearbox trailer is going to be out of commission for a period while I do a major "remodel" on it. It has seen a lot of use over the last 15 years. That leaves me with either using a ground tent, or purchasing a RTT to mount on my F-250 Superduty. I started looking for YouTube reviews and it seems like the majority of videos I found were "Why I hate my RTT" or "You don't want to buy a RTT". I'm not sure why so much negative press on them.
So can I ask you guys for your honest feedback on your RTTs? What you like and what you don't.
Thanks in advance!
Joanne
RnArmy,
Brilliant! I've heard of TentCots being repurposed as RTT but your application is the first I've seen that really makes sense. I can see objections because of restricted height and some funky material choices and the central support bar but the weight saving is profound. Love your Willys by the way.
I tried to look up TentCot in Cabella's but I think the double one is out of production. I was able to find a very nice one from Japan in my internet search. Thank you