Personal shade for tent, what works? (to buy, not build)
My trick for keeping my ezup alive and well (used same one for five years). Profile, profile, profile.
Sunny out = Ezup 6' tall with walls attached
Windy and/or Cloudy out = Ezup lowered to 4' with walls tied up or removed.
Homemade lightweight material walls held up with metal shower curtain rings. Walls start to catch wind, metal rings bend and/or break.
My shade really isn't used to protect me from wind and dust. If it is that bad, I'll go wait in my car.
and STAKE IT DOWN!
Sunny out = Ezup 6' tall with walls attached
Windy and/or Cloudy out = Ezup lowered to 4' with walls tied up or removed.
Homemade lightweight material walls held up with metal shower curtain rings. Walls start to catch wind, metal rings bend and/or break.
My shade really isn't used to protect me from wind and dust. If it is that bad, I'll go wait in my car.
and STAKE IT DOWN!
- Bob
- Posts: 6747
- Joined: Wed Sep 03, 2003 10:00 am
- Burning Since: 1986
- Camp Name: Royaneh
- Location: San Francisco
- Contact:
Misters spread salmonella! News at 11!
Amazing desert structures & stuff: http://sites.google.com/site/potatotrap/
"Let us say I suggest you may be human." -- Reverend Mother Gaius Helen Mohiam
"Let us say I suggest you may be human." -- Reverend Mother Gaius Helen Mohiam
- JezebelinHell
- Posts: 762
- Joined: Wed Sep 24, 2003 3:29 am
- Location: Reno
If you're willing to blow a little over a bill then this fucker looks pretty badass:
http://www.safetycentral.com/coboxpobaopr.html
http://www.safetycentral.com/coboxpobaopr.html
"The future is a whore, she promises herself to everyone."
--Poe
--Poe
- Boijoy
- Posts: 1445
- Joined: Wed Aug 23, 2006 4:51 pm
- Burning Since: 2006
- Camp Name: Metro Mart
- Location: Metro Mart. 4:30 Plaza
hi. I have a "pretty solid" ez up. Steel frame, teflon coated top, etc. paid about 100 for it. It bent some last year. I took the shade off during the really bad wind storms. THIS year i'm taking a hacksaw just in case I have to take apart a badly bent shade. funs time at the Burn !!
don't forget to floss
- Boijoy
- Posts: 1445
- Joined: Wed Aug 23, 2006 4:51 pm
- Burning Since: 2006
- Camp Name: Metro Mart
- Location: Metro Mart. 4:30 Plaza
Misters. If you have a way to power a mid. sized fan, you can attach a "Misty Mate" to the front of it. Works Great !! Be careful of the "self powered" systems. They seem to either use too much water or don't have enough cooling power for the desert. Alternative Energy Zone has a kewell design for portable solar powered battery & inverter. Costs approx. 300 in materials. Solar Rocks on the Playa !!
don't forget to floss
I thought you were kidding, but someone on tribe (sorry, bad w/names) told me bed sheets are a good idea, quieter... so... you ARE kidding about broom sticks, aren't you? Should I get rope & extra stakes & just stretch the sheets over my tent? I really need something space & money saving, if this works, it would be great.Bob wrote:Couple bedsheets propped on broomsticks and you're done.
Forget the carport -- buy a knot book. Arrrrr.
Thanks again!
- Bob
- Posts: 6747
- Joined: Wed Sep 03, 2003 10:00 am
- Burning Since: 1986
- Camp Name: Royaneh
- Location: San Francisco
- Contact:
Amazing desert structures & stuff: http://sites.google.com/site/potatotrap/
"Let us say I suggest you may be human." -- Reverend Mother Gaius Helen Mohiam
"Let us say I suggest you may be human." -- Reverend Mother Gaius Helen Mohiam
Bob is god spelled by a dog.
Listen up noobs, when the almighty Bob gives advice on tarp, ye shall listen.
http://www.geocities.com/potatotrap/
So it is written, so it shall be done.
Every noob should read at least the Dessert Structures and Rabar Rope and Rigging FAQ.
I used a fire staff and scythe once as a spreader for our camo netting. Worked fine.
http://www.geocities.com/potatotrap/
So it is written, so it shall be done.
Every noob should read at least the Dessert Structures and Rabar Rope and Rigging FAQ.
I used a fire staff and scythe once as a spreader for our camo netting. Worked fine.
- Bob
- Posts: 6747
- Joined: Wed Sep 03, 2003 10:00 am
- Burning Since: 1986
- Camp Name: Royaneh
- Location: San Francisco
- Contact:
Such as it is... geocities has been pretty broken since yahoo fucked it up, and I haven't been able to update it.
Amazing desert structures & stuff: http://sites.google.com/site/potatotrap/
"Let us say I suggest you may be human." -- Reverend Mother Gaius Helen Mohiam
"Let us say I suggest you may be human." -- Reverend Mother Gaius Helen Mohiam
-
Ninth Path
- Posts: 35
- Joined: Tue Apr 22, 2008 4:43 pm
- Location: Venice, CA
- Contact:
tent shade
I picked up one of these from the REI outlet. Google rei coupons and save even more money.
http://www.rei.com/outlet/product/766980
I set it up and it looks great. Not playa tested yet, but I think it will work well.
We're also designing and building our own shade structures with the help of creativeshelters.com. We're thinking 20x10, 5' high with a flat roof for the tents. The 16x10 with a ^ roof my buddy made for the '07 burn was a big hit. Easy to setup, extremely sturdy. Great website.
Ninth Path
http://www.rei.com/outlet/product/766980
I set it up and it looks great. Not playa tested yet, but I think it will work well.
We're also designing and building our own shade structures with the help of creativeshelters.com. We're thinking 20x10, 5' high with a flat roof for the tents. The 16x10 with a ^ roof my buddy made for the '07 burn was a big hit. Easy to setup, extremely sturdy. Great website.
Ninth Path
- Teo del Fuego
- Posts: 1391
- Joined: Wed Dec 07, 2005 10:31 am
- Burning Since: 2005
That REI shade structure looks alittle "whispy" to me. Where you on the Playa last year?
QUESTION: has anyone checked out the carports Harbor Freight sells? They didnt have any on display and I couldnt tell much just looking at the photo in the catalogue. Definitely cheaper than Costco but would they hold up to 50-60 mph winds?
QUESTION: has anyone checked out the carports Harbor Freight sells? They didnt have any on display and I couldnt tell much just looking at the photo in the catalogue. Definitely cheaper than Costco but would they hold up to 50-60 mph winds?
- C187
- Posts: 715
- Joined: Sat Jul 21, 2007 9:39 am
- Burning Since: 2003
- Camp Name: BRC Welding & Repair / Black Hole
- Location: Vancouver
If you stake it right, along with doing other things. A few 10x10's together are nice. Some of the burners from my area did it last year. They used something like the Groundmaster Post's, along with a good rail up. Some ties, and duct tape keep things together. Only once did anyone feel the need to hold onto the shade structure.
For myself, the poles from the basic pop-up bent to all hell. I forgot to pack my replacement poles. So What i ended up doing was taking the tarp and pooping it slightly above my tent, with the rest of it held down by my extra rebar. I set it up so it was mostly in the areas the Sun would be at while I was in the tent. It worked well.
For this year, my friend and I are working out a plan to use both our tents and have our shade over both. Since we know that we're not going to be spending a lot of time home. The shade will only 15ish cm above the tents.
Like someone else said. If you can't make it solid, make it flex. One more thing, the normal poles that come with a pop up... they will break.
(You can see the structure I was talking about in my Flicker BM set...)
For myself, the poles from the basic pop-up bent to all hell. I forgot to pack my replacement poles. So What i ended up doing was taking the tarp and pooping it slightly above my tent, with the rest of it held down by my extra rebar. I set it up so it was mostly in the areas the Sun would be at while I was in the tent. It worked well.
For this year, my friend and I are working out a plan to use both our tents and have our shade over both. Since we know that we're not going to be spending a lot of time home. The shade will only 15ish cm above the tents.
Like someone else said. If you can't make it solid, make it flex. One more thing, the normal poles that come with a pop up... they will break.
(You can see the structure I was talking about in my Flicker BM set...)
I have a little bit of Savannah with me. Shhh...
- Josh-n-Cody
- Posts: 46
- Joined: Sat Jun 28, 2008 6:03 am
- Burning Since: 2008
- Location: Washington DC
- Contact:
EZ Pop ups are ok?
I can see that if you are going over a tent... makes sense... how tall can they get over a trailer?
- stormfeather
- Posts: 155
- Joined: Mon Feb 12, 2007 7:10 pm
- Location: sTEAp Tea House, Portlandia
I found out about Tarpman "swap meet style" shade structures, last year on the shade geeks Tribe.
Buy the connectors, tarp and ball bungees, tie downs and stakes from him, buy your EMT conduit pipe cut to size locally.
http://www.tarpman.us/servlet/the-CANOP ... Categories
There may be other mfgrs. of the corner connectors, you might check locally. I believe there is someone in the Bay Area, CA who sells at Oakland/Berkeley/Emeryville at the swapmeet.
You can add shadecloth, aluminette, tarp, or bedsheet walls. It is 9' ft high at peaked center, 7 ' ft high along the sides.
We have a 20x20.
Shade cloth attached to the structure shades our tent trailer.
My husband built a simple plastic pipe frame that sits up on tent trailer roof, keeps the shade cloth up off top of tenting and creates airspace.
One person can erect in 2 hours, with help about an hour.
playa tested, lower cost than carports, less fiddly bits.
Staked and with tie downs, It was rock solid. Of course we did not bother with solid tarp walls as we had our little tent trailer to retreat to in a dust storm, but you could always close in half of a 20x 20 for privacy or to sleep in.
As the sTEAp teahouse at SOAK:
On the Playa:
Buy the connectors, tarp and ball bungees, tie downs and stakes from him, buy your EMT conduit pipe cut to size locally.
http://www.tarpman.us/servlet/the-CANOP ... Categories
There may be other mfgrs. of the corner connectors, you might check locally. I believe there is someone in the Bay Area, CA who sells at Oakland/Berkeley/Emeryville at the swapmeet.
You can add shadecloth, aluminette, tarp, or bedsheet walls. It is 9' ft high at peaked center, 7 ' ft high along the sides.
We have a 20x20.
Shade cloth attached to the structure shades our tent trailer.
My husband built a simple plastic pipe frame that sits up on tent trailer roof, keeps the shade cloth up off top of tenting and creates airspace.
One person can erect in 2 hours, with help about an hour.
playa tested, lower cost than carports, less fiddly bits.
Staked and with tie downs, It was rock solid. Of course we did not bother with solid tarp walls as we had our little tent trailer to retreat to in a dust storm, but you could always close in half of a 20x 20 for privacy or to sleep in.
As the sTEAp teahouse at SOAK:
On the Playa:
Camp Sietch Grabrear & Shai-Hulud MV
6:00 and Fossil 2009
http://sandworm.tikimojo.com
The Spice Must Flow!
6:00 and Fossil 2009
http://sandworm.tikimojo.com
The Spice Must Flow!
Shelter Systems is a joint connector style too.
Their cheap tarp is a full block tarp.
I like the version they have that comes with two size tarps so you can set it up as a small or large shade structure.
They carry sides too, in screen and solid.
Slip joints are very useful if you need to cut your poles to carry them.
http://www.shelsys.com/
They also have parts for a flat roof.
They have a very wide accessory choice like feet for sand, wall braces.
$140 for a 10 x 20, 10 x 10 combo.
Their cheap tarp is a full block tarp.
I like the version they have that comes with two size tarps so you can set it up as a small or large shade structure.
They carry sides too, in screen and solid.
Slip joints are very useful if you need to cut your poles to carry them.
http://www.shelsys.com/
They also have parts for a flat roof.
They have a very wide accessory choice like feet for sand, wall braces.
$140 for a 10 x 20, 10 x 10 combo.
Did you mean http://www.reflectixinc.com/ or another reflectix site? I did email them but I think they sell through delaers which I don't have near me. I might go w/lowes, tape it together. So.. it's pretty bulky ha? How do you call just the reflective part w/out the bubbles, I searched for "scrim" that didn't work:) Would I be able to sow or tape it to a tarp or bed sheet? I'm copletely new to this, just trying to make something usefull for my tent, I really hate waking up so hot I got a headache for the rest of the day.gyre wrote:Did you call Reflectix?
It comes up to ten feet wide.
I have had good luck special ordering through Lowes here, though not reflectix.
The scrim is without the bubbles. 4 x 120 feet.
Makes it easy to pack.
I think silvicool is available in some good sizes.
How big is big?
I have another dumb question, are there any sturdy poles that can be staked down real good, are tall but relatively light & connectable for easy transport? (fit in suitcase) I read one in front, one in back, connect w/rope & throw tarp over, but my tent's 6 feet high.
How's the durability on the Reflectix?
Also, does anyone have experience with Tyvek Reflekta?
-piper
Also, does anyone have experience with Tyvek Reflekta?
-piper
BP Foil/Bubble Products
• BP48025
• BP24025
• ST16025
• BP48050 or BP48100 (Typically - Special Order Products)
Foil/Scrim/Foil Sheet Product
• RB48125
http://www.reflectixinc.com/diy/default ... eIndex=530
Someone posted a link to a page of someone covering a tent in this stuff recently with stats.
I haven't tried attaching it myself.
The advantage to the scrim would be packing, I think.
It seems fragile, but Unjon has slept on it.
They tell me it will take 180 degrees directly and takes attic abuse.
I haven't seen the Tyvek.
I have seen solid aluminet on the playa.
It seems less shiny but very tough.
• BP48025
• BP24025
• ST16025
• BP48050 or BP48100 (Typically - Special Order Products)
Foil/Scrim/Foil Sheet Product
• RB48125
http://www.reflectixinc.com/diy/default ... eIndex=530
Someone posted a link to a page of someone covering a tent in this stuff recently with stats.
I haven't tried attaching it myself.
The advantage to the scrim would be packing, I think.
It seems fragile, but Unjon has slept on it.
They tell me it will take 180 degrees directly and takes attic abuse.
I haven't seen the Tyvek.
I have seen solid aluminet on the playa.
It seems less shiny but very tough.
I have some reflectix here I can test to a point.ziptie wrote:How's the durability on the Reflectix?
Also, does anyone have experience with Tyvek Reflekta?
-piper
I have handled some white tyvek car covers and was very impressed.
Tyvek tends to be very tough.
Reflectix may sell direct if you can't find a fair price elsewhere.
I've found the Reflectix for a fair price online, but not having had experience with insulation-abuse I don't know how much it can stand. I'd be interested to hear what kind of results you get from it.
The Tyvek Reflektra option is looking very attractive but I'm wondering about its % of light-blockage. Since it's metallized and UV-protective it's probably pretty good . . . I will probably scout around to see if any of the hardware stores around here stock it. Google doesn't turn up a lot of results for it so I am wondering whether it is fairly difficult to find in the wild.
The Tyvek Reflektra option is looking very attractive but I'm wondering about its % of light-blockage. Since it's metallized and UV-protective it's probably pretty good . . . I will probably scout around to see if any of the hardware stores around here stock it. Google doesn't turn up a lot of results for it so I am wondering whether it is fairly difficult to find in the wild.
Picked up a bit of Reflectix to play with. We will see how it holds up.
Had to ask around at several places for the fancy Tyvek and have been told that it is merely the old name for the ThermaWrap, but I am not sure that that is true, given that the latter is hard-structure home-wrap and the former is soft-structure. Tomorrow I will call the people who sell it online to see if they will send me a sample.
Had to ask around at several places for the fancy Tyvek and have been told that it is merely the old name for the ThermaWrap, but I am not sure that that is true, given that the latter is hard-structure home-wrap and the former is soft-structure. Tomorrow I will call the people who sell it online to see if they will send me a sample.
