I've noticed that some tents with attached awnings/porches, now come with webbing straps attached, instead of ordinary guy lines.
Has anyone replaced their own guys with similar webbing?
I'm wondering if it's worth doing on our Monterey attached canopy - and on the front of the extension (although never used it yet!) for stability and to reduce strain on these vulnerable points.
If the pegs don't come out of the ground first, the next thing to break will be the guy line attachment points on tent. The guy lines themselves won't break so only value of a storm strap is if it is continuous from peg to peg over tent & this will only really work on a rigid structure like frame tent. It it comes with webbing straps then fixing points will probably be stronger so not really worth fitting stronger straps to existing guy line points.
I have been thinking about using webbing straps instead of guy lines for the front of our pyramid tent as they only loop onto the spikes of the frame so no sewing.
Too many guy lines to consider replacing all of them but I think the front ones could be worthwhile especially if the wind direction changes.
Quote: Originally posted by SGThomas on 05/3/2015
Normally the webbing strap anchors are sewn in at different points from poles and guys. They tend to not chafe the canvas when being buffeted by wind.
When we had a trailer ten, we used double bungee hooks between the guy and the ground anchor which allowed controlled flexing of the frame
so maybe add these to the peg end of the current guy lines should be sufficient? would also make adjusting the guy lines on site easier as hubby likes to hammer the pegs to Australia!
they look smaller than they actually are, I bought some for our tarp and they are actually approx. 25cm long from ball to end (approx. 5mm thick) with ends tied by wire and the ball is the size of a gobstopper.
Hi, dont be tempted to put storm straps on a canvas tent as you will make it leak where the strap is in contact with the canvas. I did this once and had a terrible wet leaky night!
Hi Underthestars - our frame tent has a PVC coated roof so IF I used stormstraps on that, leaks from breaching the canvas barrier probably wouldn't occur - but might abrade the fabric. Did they stop the tent from lifting off?
When we were in the Vendee with a forecast of 70m an hour winds I did start to consider their usefulness... fortunately the winds didn't materialise. That would have been interesting.