Quote: Originally posted by armchaircamper on 13/9/2011
It's very misleading to suggest that the guys are an optional extra. I know some people get away with not guying out (DD and friends a week ago!) if there's no wind but the default setting should be to use the guylines.
So saying, I haven't bothered with the one at the front of the bell tent the last couple of times as it gets in the way of entering and exiting the tent. My back gets sore enough bending to get in the doorway without stooping under the guyline as well. But if it was windy I would peg it out.
Sarah, there is a way to guy the top of the A-frame so you don't have to duck under a guyline, and that's by using 2 guylines instead of one. Just have them both going to the attachment point at top of doorway, and peg them out away from the door.
Quote: Originally posted by petemillis on 14/9/2011
Quote: Originally posted by armchaircamper on 13/9/2011
It's very misleading to suggest that the guys are an optional extra. I know some people get away with not guying out (DD and friends a week ago!) if there's no wind but the default setting should be to use the guylines.
So saying, I haven't bothered with the one at the front of the bell tent the last couple of times as it gets in the way of entering and exiting the tent. My back gets sore enough bending to get in the doorway without stooping under the guyline as well. But if it was windy I would peg it out.
Sarah, there is a way to guy the top of the A-frame so you don't have to duck under a guyline, and that's by using 2 guylines instead of one. Just have them both going to the attachment point at top of doorway, and peg them out away from the door.
Thats handy to know and quite obvious when somebody says it.. like an ahhhh moment !!!
------------- Carley x
Aug 2011 - Brighouse Bay
Aug 2011 - Wild Rose Park
Sep 2011 - UKCS Meet Skipton
April 2012 - Charity Farm
May 2012 - Primrose Valley (Caravan)
July 2012 - Nantcols
"Guy ropes can give your tent added stability and are used on some tents when the conditions are extremely windy or there’s a combination of wind and heavy rain but the larger your tent, the less likely you’ll need guy ropes."
It's unusual advice but hardly worthy of the vitriol on here. I have large tunnel tents (Vango and Outwell) and neither use guy lines for their shape, the other pegging points both give it shape and hold it down. Unpredictable weather make full guys a good idea but it's certainly not essential.
The guy ropes are there to give the tent added stability when the conditions are extremely windy, the guy in the quote isn't lying.
"Guy ropes can give your tent added stability and are used on some tents when the conditions are extremely windy or there’s a combination of wind and heavy rain but the larger your tent, the less likely you’ll need guy ropes."
On display at camperite leisure our tents are up 24/7 and every guy rope is out. They are not for display purposes or to be in the way when walking round they are out for a reason, You dont no what can happen at night time take last week for example it was blowing a storm down here that came over night ! so if we didnt have them all out i think there may have been a problem with the A12 and the A120 the next day with tents in the road lol.
I only used my corner guy ropes when I first got my tent as that's all that were tied to it, there was a seperate bag of guy ropes but I thought they were just spares in case the 4 corner ones snapped?
On the 3rd day I realised they were to tie around the tent hoops that I found all along both sides of said tent (Doh!)
In all honesty, the tent was stable even in light wind with just the 4 corners pegged and they were even staked down with them crappy tent pegs that bend like Baco-foil if a worm is in the way - so I'd say, yeah, the advice was pretty accurate.
------------- There's only ONE thing worse than being talked about, and that's... NOT being talked about! :-)