Friday 1 October 2010

TarpTent Scarp 1: First impressions

I got my Scarp 1 yesterday, merely a week after ordering it from the US. I emailed Henry the day after I ordered it politely inquiring if I'd be lucky enough to receive a tent out of the fresh batch of Scarps that had just arrived. Henry replied the same day - he'd already shipped it!

I spent the best part of the week refreshing the USPS parcel tracking page.

Anyway, on to the unboxing. My first impressions of the tent in the bag but out of the box was that it seemed heavier, and larger than I was hoping for. It turns out this was an illusion. In a straight hand-holding test it's practically the same weight as my Eureka Spitfire 1 tent, maybe lighter. I havent put it on the scales.

The reason the size threw me is that for the last few months I've been stuffing my Spitfire into a compression sack and compressing the hell out of it until it's the size of a large grapefruit, and packing the poles and pegs separately. So last night, for comparisson's sake I repacked my Spitfire in its original bag to find it's about 20% fatter than the Scarp 1, if the same length. That's nice.

I won't be able to pack the Scarp 1 down the way I did the Spitfire because of the carbon rods at the ends that give the tent its corner structure, much like you can see in the Akto and Laser tents. You can take the rods out of course (to replace them if they break I guess) but there are 10 of them and that's a massive faff. It just means I need to think differently the next time I pack.

I had just enough space in my bedroom to set the tent up in its free-standing mode! Setup in this fashion is a breeze, and very intuitive. I'm sure the more common staking mode is just as easy. Henry provides a simple set of printed instructions and once you unfurl the tent it's easy to see how the corner and end support structures work.

This is a well thought-out tent. There are lots of venting options; one at each end, and the top vents, and the side of the fly slides up the main arch pole as well, and while I was initially put out by the lack of a double-zip on the fly doors I think it's compensated for by the presence of the clip and velcro patch at the base of the door so you can have the door unzipped the whole way but kept mostly closed by these fixing points.

The inner is suspended from the fly at a number of hanging points, but the base of the inner is floating in that it has no ground attachments of its own. It's a bit tricky (almost impossible?) to get to the end vents from inside the tent without detatching the inner first, but that's not hard.

The vestibules are quite narrow, but there are two of them, so I'm thinking that one of them can basically stay empty for cooking and whatnot, with kit stashed in the other. Also, the floating inner means it can be pegged back easily to make more room as others have already done.

I'd read about the huge amount of space inside before buying so I was expecting big things. But it's not that big. It's bigger than the Spitfire of course, and with the straight walls, more of it is usable. I guess that never having owned a Laser Comp I don't have the same perspective. Don't get me wrong, there's room, but once you start bringing clothes and gear inside your sleeping mat is going to start getting cozy with it all. But with all that vertical space it won't feel crowded.

All I need now is some silicone and a spare couple of hours to seal the seams and I can get out and use it.

So far I'm still excited about the tent, and I'm looking forward to finishing it up and getting outside with it for the first time.

No comments: