Tis scary like. Outwell are sending a replacement tent and extension to GO, should be in early next week so all is good. Will check out that netweather, thx
------------- "One should always have a definite objective in a walk, as in life it is so much more satisfying to reach a target by personal effort than to wander aimlessly. An objective is an ambition, and life without ambition is ... well, aimless wandering." - AW
Blimey..... i am also very suprised by this, as a Hartford xl 2008 'gothic style' owner i am convinced it is one of the best and most secure tents in wind out there, we have survived ridiculous weather mainly coastal and have woken many times to find a high percentage of the rest of the field destroyed, very odd yours just collapsed? We do use deltas religiously mind and would never touch any kind of extension, just do not trust them ...... very unlucky and i wish you better luck with the new tent.
Yeah I was really surprised. The reason we bought the XL was that we had a very windy aug bank hol up in Glenridding, a lot of tents were trashed but there were two xl's that the wind didnt phase at all. GO seem to think we have just had a dodgy one-off as they have never seen such carnage LOL!
------------- "One should always have a definite objective in a walk, as in life it is so much more satisfying to reach a target by personal effort than to wander aimlessly. An objective is an ambition, and life without ambition is ... well, aimless wandering." - AW
Sorry to hear of your experiences, and quite surprised too. I've not been camping long but our Hartford L held up exceptionally well in some very gusty weather last year.
Good luck with the replacement and bear in mind the benefits of good old fashioned wooden poled winbreaks or strategic parking of the car in future.
------------- Manor Park Farm, Cromer every august, but somewhere different every may/June.
4 years of superior packing yet still no room in the car
You should have seen the state of the windbreak! It was completely mashed up! 3 wooden poles broke! We had the cars strategically parked, one was parked with its tyre on top of a peg that kept working out of the ground and the other we had ropes tied round the alloys LOL! I'm still digging shards of fiber glass pole out of my hands LOL! We survived though thats what counts, and it hasn't put me off camping in the slightest :-)
------------- "One should always have a definite objective in a walk, as in life it is so much more satisfying to reach a target by personal effort than to wander aimlessly. An objective is an ambition, and life without ambition is ... well, aimless wandering." - AW
Hi not very nice for that to happen must have been scary.
On another note i am trying to get replacement bedroom pods for my hartford tent as they where removed from the tent last year and have been dumped by mistake. By any chance do you still have the old bedrooms of the tent that collapsed
This is allways a problem in moutainess areas the wind pick up speed as its pushed through the gaps between then funneling strong gusts staight down the valley in many parts of the lakes you can hear it coming sound like a train then it shakes your tent like crazy then nothing till the next gust. i personaly dont think fiberglass poles are fit for the job of holding such large tents up . one pole breaks this then puts stress on allready stressed poles . just seeing the amount of posts on here re broken snapped poles tells you that . If you need a large tent go for steel never ever had an issue with steel poles . I hope this hasnt put you off and you get sorted with a new tent
Ah sorry I don't. The full thing was dumped very irately back with Go Outdoors!
Turns out I wasn't even sold a 2010 model I was sold the older 2007 model GGGRRRRRRR!
Hope you manage to get some
------------- "One should always have a definite objective in a walk, as in life it is so much more satisfying to reach a target by personal effort than to wander aimlessly. An objective is an ambition, and life without ambition is ... well, aimless wandering." - AW
Quote: Originally posted by alibali65 on 26/7/2011
We have a 2008 model and last Aug Bank Holiday our cracked a few poles innthe bedroom pods due to strong gusts.
Have to say half the fields tents were flattened or had canopies thatvwere more flags
In all honesty despite the force of the wind there wasnt that many tents trashed, could have been worse. Ours must have just been a dodgy one as the new one I have seems so much more stable
------------- "One should always have a definite objective in a walk, as in life it is so much more satisfying to reach a target by personal effort than to wander aimlessly. An objective is an ambition, and life without ambition is ... well, aimless wandering." - AW
.... Get yourself some of them kids bedrooms LOL... would be colourful!
Mind I suppose if you know someone who is dapper with a sewing machine they wont be too hard to knock up if you get desperate?
------------- "One should always have a definite objective in a walk, as in life it is so much more satisfying to reach a target by personal effort than to wander aimlessly. An objective is an ambition, and life without ambition is ... well, aimless wandering." - AW
This why I will only buy tents with steel poles, first we had the Montana 6 which was pretty much the only tent left standing after a really bad night once, then we switched to the smaller Minnesota 4 which is absolutely rock solid. Fiberglass poles are not suitable for such large tents, I don't care what any of the manufacturers say!