Three Season Tent Comparative Review
By Steve Mann
This review includes these tents:
Sierra Designs Orion CD
Peak 1 Apollo
Kelty Windfoil Ultralite
Walrus Rapeed
Eureka Assault 2XT
Sierra Designs Orion CD Our testers liked the Orion CD's ease of setup, good ventilation, and a spaciousness. The two
pole design with simple clip attachments make setting up the Orion a breeze, easiest of the
bunch. After a couple of setups you could probably go from opening the stuff sack to lying down
for a quick snooze in just a few minutes.
Orion's profile is tallest of the five, leading one tester to question its wind endurance. However
the crossing poles seems to create a sturdy frame with adequate strength
Our testers noticed a common flaw-the rainfly did not completely cover the rear tent corners. On
the Orion, this could be easily remedied by lengthening the corner straps by two or three inches
and moving the buckle out to the end of the strap. As built, the buckles sit between the poles and
tent corner leaving it exposed to dripping rain off the fly. This arrangement also makes buckling
the clip awkward and tightening the strap difficult. On the positive side, the rainfly sits close to
the ground evenly around the tent. The Orion is not factory taped, so instruct your customers to
seal the seams prior to first use.
A small flap in the rainfly sits just over the vestibule door. This flap offers ventilation during
bad weather, producing good top ventilation, without rain exposure. However, when the door is
zipped open, rain drips off the flap onto the tent floor, potentially wetting your gear.
Our taller testers notice the Orion's shorter interior length. For anyone 6' or taller, stretching out
means touching the tent wall at one end. Vestibule size was adequate, but a tight fit for two
packs.
Summary: A great all-around tent and our overall favorite, with good ventilation, adequate
vestibule, excellent ease of setup and only a couple of minor flaws on the rainfly. A great value.
The lack of taped seams is acceptable for this price point-you'll need to allow time to seal the seams
prior to your first trip.
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Peak 1 Apollo
Peak 1's Apollo is an economical tent with many of the features of higher priced tents, although
those features are not as well designed and constructed as the higher-priced models. For
example, Apollo's vestibule is spacious, yet it is not freestanding-it requires a guy string to keep
the vestibule hoop upright-and the vestibule door overlaps the tent body, allowing rain to fall on
the tent when you zip open the door.
Good design creates a roll back vestibule, allowing you to use the rainfly without the vestibule.
The end hoop of the vestibule fits so tightly into the rainfly that it is almost impossible to setup.
During our initial setup test we heard the pole start to crack, then eased up. Two of us eventually
got it setup without breaking it. Later in the field one of the poles split-fortunately a small roll of
duct tape supplied a temporary fix.
Other than the vestibule hoop and weak poles, the Apollo sets up easily. Two crossing
continuous pole sleeves frame the tent. Most of the body is mesh, making a tent with excellent
ventilation and great night time views. It also limits the Apollo to generally warmer conditions.
The Apollo's two doors, one at each end, are fabric rather than mesh-not a problem given the
tent's mesh body. The doors attached to the tent body across the top, zipping in a U-shape down,
across the floor and back up to the top, leaving the door fabric hanging from the top of the tent.
All of our testers found this to be inconvenient as the door would hang down in the way. The
toggle loops which fasten the door at the top, were too tight and difficult to attach. A side
opening D-style door would be a significant improvement. The door zipper doesn't extend far
enough down, leaving a six to eight inch wide fabric strip at the base of the doorway. We
frequently tripped over this strip when entering the tent, and it made working in the vestibule
area from inside the tent, such as to cook.
The Apollo has excellent fly coverage, odd since this is the most common weakness of the higher
priced tents in this review.
Summary:The Apollo is a fair general purpose backpacking tent. Perhaps the tent's most
significant weakness is the frailty of the poles. The tent's mesh body suits it well for warm
weather camping.
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Kelty Windfoil Ultralight
The Windfoil is indeed a very light, but surprisingly capable tent. Its interior space is tight for
two people, but great for one person or a couple. The vestibule is very small; boots are about all
you can protect from the elements. For one person, you could drag the pack into the tent-for two
you'd better have an alternative plan to keep your gear dry.
Setup is easy, although we found it difficult to get the tent and rainfly as taut as we'd like.
The tent features two hoop style poles with continuous pole sleeves. The poles have a rubber
stopper at one end that slides through the sleeve and into a pocket. We appreciated this simple
design which reduces the likelihood of the pole damaging the sleeve. Rainfly protection was
very good.
Ventilation is adequate, except in very warm weather, with two mesh strips about five inches
wide running down the full length of the tent about half way up the side wall. Most testers felt
the tent would be improved by widening these strips. The existing mesh does not offer good
viewing at night.
Summary:A great lightweight backpacking tent for one or two who know each other well. This
one was well liked by everyone who tried it. The best choice for longer trips or smaller
backpackers for whom weight is an issue.
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Eureka Assault 2XT
The Assault is heavier than the other models reviewed here. The Assault differs from the
other four in that it is suitable for light four-season usage, and has larger interior space.
Dual doors are located along the sides (length) of the tent. Over each door the rainfly forms a
vestibule, the "front" being larger and the rear mainly a boot vestibule. The doors are both mesh
and fabric contributing to the Assault's four-season abilities. The front vestibule is acceptable,
but seemed small for the overall size of the tent; cooking would be difficult in the limited space.
Dual zippers on the front vestibule make it possible to vent the doorway for circulation.
A long mesh panel flows from end to end across the top of the tent body for good condensation
release and ventilation. Assault's three pole design makes for a sturdier frame; adequate for light
to moderate snow load.
Other notable touches on the Assault include a pole pocket in the stuff sack, an optional
footprint, taped seams on the wrap-around bathtub floor, and good headroom. Rainfly coverage
is good, covering the entire tent body including corners, and sitting close the ground.
One drawback of the Assault is the lack of sealed seams on the tent body. Eureka includes a tube
of seam sealer which is about a two hour job. We found two types of tent stakes in the bag, but
together there were not enough to stake down the tent and rainfly. We recommend buying extra
stakes when you buy the tent.
Summary:A good three-plus season tent for those who need a little extra space or planning time
out in snow or colder weather. Sturdy construction, acceptable (but barely) vestibule space, and
good ventilation are the Assault's highlights.
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Walrus Rapeed
The Rapeed features Walrus' hub-technology at key pole junctions to create a sturdy tent with a
good-sized front vestibule. Small shock-corded poles meet at the hub-junction points at the crest
of the tent above the foot and over the front door of this tunnel-style tent. A front-to-back
backbone pole connects the two hubs.
The single door is a D-style with both mesh and fabric zipper panels. The fabric panel allows
you to close off the mesh door in colder weather. Rapeed's ventialtion stems from the door mesh
and a small mesh window at the tent's foot. Our field staff expressed concern that this relatively
small amount of mesh would keep the tent too warm in summer. Certainly you would need to
make sure to align the tent's length (door to foot) with the wind direction to ensure adequate
ventilation.
We also speculated that the lack of mesh at the top of the tent (along the "roof") would restrict
condensation from escaping, although the front-to-back venting would allow air flow through
through the highest point of the mesh door.
Setup time was slightly longer than average. The hubs and poles come preattached to the tent
with sturdy laces. Take down was relatively easy-easier than setup-but getting the poles back
into their original positions to roll up the tent seemed overly complex. Also, all of our testers
have grown to prefer stuffing tents and rainflies into the sack rather than rolling them up.
Stuffing prevents creasing of the tent in the same place every time you stow it; rolling tends to
occur in the same way every time. Rapeed's attached poles eliminate the stuffing option.
Vestibule size and versatility are two of the Rapeed's strengths. The dual-zippered door allows
multiple options: zip one open and pull back the side for cooking during inclement weather; zip
both up a few inches for ventilation; or zip both completely for easy access. Our testers did
question the choice of hot pink for the vestibule area, but that's just a style preference.
Rapeed's weaknesses all relate to the rainfly. First, it sits too high off the ground, especially on
the tent's sides. In fairness, the fly will keep rain off the tent body, but in a strong wind may let
too much of it underneath. The fly also did not cover the rear corners well, allowing rain to drip
onto the tent body. Since the corners are part of the tent's bathtub floor, they are probably
waterproof. Finally, no stake loop on middle of back of the rainfly forces you to use a guy string
(provided) to hold the fly taut and away from the tent
Summary:The Rapeed offers a lightweight, strong two-person tent, with a larger than average
vestibule, and light four-season capability. The lack of side mesh for ventilation steers us away
from the Rapeed for warm summer usage. Ease of setup rates fair, the hub making for added
stability but more complexity on setup and take down.
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