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Photo by Lois Pryce, schoolkids in Algeria

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and schoolkids in Algeria




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  #1  
Old 16 Sep 2011
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Is there really any need for high end equipment?

I was thinking about getting a new tent for a trip, so I popped down to a local shop and saw the prices but they were extravagantly high. A few years ago, I went over to Europe and I had a very cheap, £10-20 tent and it did the job perfectly fine. It was waterproof, had good ventilation and so on, which makes me wonder how exactly companies can charge £100-200 for a one man tent. I just don't see any value there at all. They might be slightly better, yeah, but a tent is a tent, surely? I certainly don't see enough difference between the one I had a few years ago and a high end one now.

I think quite a few camping/survival items are overpriced. Groudsheets, for example. For what they are, there is no way they're worth £25 or whatever you can get charged.

Anyway...rant over! haha
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  #2  
Old 16 Sep 2011
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Well, any answer to this is of course subjective !
You don"t really need someone to tell you "you get what you pay for" Do you ?
Sometimes you get something that works great and you payed half price of what you could have payed for something that did not work half as well, sometimes you pay a lot of money for something that is crap.

Better question would be recommendations for specific brands and cost/quality.
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  #3  
Old 16 Sep 2011
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In terms of tents there's no point shelling out on a Wild Country Quasar (amazing tent) if your going to a festival, and there's equally no point taking a 20 quid pop-up tent into the Tien Shan for some high-altitude super-alpinism.

Same goes for weight savings - a mountain marathon runner is likely to pay a lot for single-skin goretex tent if it saves him 2 kg.

There is undoubtedly some high-end kit that is totally and utterly pointless..... Why anyone would pay 40 odd quid for a piece of laser-cut anodised aluminium to protect their sidestand switch when cutting the switch off and throwing it in a bin would save weight and money is beyond me!
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  #4  
Old 16 Sep 2011
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Is there really any need for high end equipment?

I think that in general that people feel a big need to have the best / lightest/newest equipment.
And i know that there are Manny people that are happy like a kid with there high end equipment.
So is there a need?? Yes
Do you "really" need it??No
(Almost everything apart from food and water you do not "really" need,but it can make you feel very happy)


And i do see a difference in cheap shit ,and something better made.
But always look if it meets my needs,sometimes normal is good for me,
sometimes a bit more high end.

Saludos.
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Old 17 Sep 2011
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My opinion and its only my opinion but
£20 tent probably cheap enough to last the year before a zip gets broken or the crinkly groundsheet wears holes kids borrow it and dont return it.
£180 tent good quality lasts 11 years before you have to replace it cos the groundsheet is not as waterproof as it once was.

I have recently replaced my 14 year old tent that cost £165 back in the day.

A better tent could be more spacious so you would be more likley to use it rather than the B&B option when its raining.

We have friends who bought a Tipi because you can use it in any weather and be comfortable and now never use B&B or hotels.
Tipi very expensive £1k 5 week trip to europe hotels/hostel at £60 per night very expensive tent more than paid for and you still have it for the next 15 years trips.
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  #6  
Old 17 Sep 2011
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I've recently upgraded to a 2011 MSR Hubba Hubba, it cost £225 brand new (including a Petzl Headtorch worth £20). Was it worth? I don't know yet but I am very impressed with it so far. I will be testing it out on a short trip next weekend, along with my large Thermarest Ventra down comforter/duvet.

Why did I pay £200+ over a cheapie? Because I wanted to! Moreover, it packs a lot smaller than even the smallest 2 man cheapie or moderately priced tent I've ever seen or used. It's free standing, it has situp headroom, it has 2 entrances/vestibules, it's green and it has that nice mossie mesh rather than that hot sweaty greenhouse inner that most tents have.

It's not perfect by any stretch of the imagination but perfection is a hard thing to attain in anything, but it's the best solution I could find to meet all my requirements, necessary or otherwise. Only time will tell if I'm happy with it and whether it was worth the extra money?
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  #7  
Old 6 Jan 2013
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Quote:
Originally Posted by henryuk View Post
In terms of tents there's no point shelling out on a Wild Country Quasar (amazing tent) if your going to a festival, and there's equally no point taking a 20 quid pop-up tent into the Tien Shan for some high-altitude super-alpinism.

Same goes for weight savings - a mountain marathon runner is likely to pay a lot for single-skin goretex tent if it saves him 2 kg.

There is undoubtedly some high-end kit that is totally and utterly pointless..... Why anyone would pay 40 odd quid for a piece of laser-cut anodised aluminium to protect their sidestand switch when cutting the switch off and throwing it in a bin would save weight and money is beyond me!
I think there are some great responses to this thread but this has to sum it up the best for me. Klim suit £1000 plus great if you have the cash to burn. I have a vented jacket and pants with some army gore tex jacket and pants to go over the top less than a tenth of the price and does the same job. Just be careful if you come off in the bush when its wet as no one may ever find you
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  #8  
Old 13 Jan 2013
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just back from a 1 year trip South Central North America.
Our 5 years old Quetcha tent(dechatlon 50 euro's) did it very well. At the very end of the trip all the zippers gave some problems and the seals started to worn out, but it was still wind and waterproof.
Only disadvantage was the weigth.
I noticed that the lighter a tent is, the more it will cost.

Keep it dry guys!

ils
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  #9  
Old 15 Feb 2013
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as i heard "Touring Ted" say on here...... "every $20 saved on preparation is another day on the road"


Been interesting to read this thread. Just going through the decision process of which gear to get at the moment and I'm tending to keep it minimalist and fairly cheap/simple.
I always remind myself of early travellers/ explorers/ adventurers and the simple gear/ setups they would of had.
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  #10  
Old 17 Sep 2011
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The makers of high end equipment are also the pioneers
of new products and materials. After a wile the other makers follow and copy those ideas, prices drop and high end ideas become available
for a bigger public,and become a normal standard to people.
And the pioneers invent something else,other follow....... etc etc

So it is very good that there is a big marked for high end equipment.

Haven sad that,i do have a few of those products.(but not everything)
In parts of South America it just is not available.(not easy)
And if available ,its twice the Europe price,really ridiculous.

I do ride a lot with the locals here,and see everyone with 5dollar rain ponchos,30 dollar tents,and a 20 dollar backpack.
And they do fine .
I lowered my standard since i used to live in Holland
and also use a few cheaper solutions now.
Sometimes by choice ,sometimes because it just ain't available.
The good thing about that is that you don't worry about loosing or braking
stuff,just becouse you dont have it,and that is a nice feeling.


Saludos.
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  #11  
Old 17 Sep 2011
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High-end (and thus expensive) gear is not necessary by any stretch of the imagination, but it certainly does make life a lot easier sometimes! It depends entirely on the conditions. If you use a tent once a month only in the summer, anything will do. If you use a tent every day for a year, paying for a quality tent will make your life a lot more pleasant. A lot of high-end gear is like this, though there is a lot of over-priced junk available as well.

Also note that you should not underestimate the usefulness of a small lightweight tent if you ever get off pavement. It can make handling the bike a lot easier in difficult conditions.
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  #12  
Old 17 Sep 2011
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I must admit to owning a lot of tents, it's a disease!

The tent I use on my big trips (3 -4 weeks) is a Hillerberg Nallo 2 GT. I've had it for 5 years and it's in as good condition as the day I bought it. I have the footprint groundsheet as well as this gives you a floor in the vestibule. But, it's a very expensive bit of kit, currently a new one with a groundsheet is £700!! No-one needs to spend that kind of money on a tent. Take my experience with tipi's...

A few years ago I bought myself a nice new Tentipi, a lightweight 5 man. I'd seen plenty in Norway and Sweden and I wanted one. How cool would that be? I'd been invited into a couple and just loved the whole idea of having all that room and being able to cook inside it.

To cut a long story short Tentipi had a manufacturing issue with the thread the seams were made of and it leaked. I tried another 2, one was even posted to me from Sweden, but they leaked too. Taunton leisure were great and tried to resolve the issue for me but in the end I had my money back and roughed it in my Hillerberg. So my tipi was not to be.

Then this year, a couple of weeks before Ripley I noticed that Argos had a tipi in their sale for £40. Now I like a bargain and thought I'd give it a go. You may have seen it, hard to miss really, the brown one next to all those Serows. I gave it a head start by proofing it with £10 worth of Fabsil, bugger the expense! As those of you that were there know we had a little rain over the 4 days and did it leak? Not one bit!

Currently a Tentipi Zirkon 5 man is £729...

Tentipi... Zirkon 5 light - Zirkon - Tentipi Tents & Accessories - Nordic Outdoor

The Argos special is now reduced to £36!!! Go get one whilst stocks last.

Argos...Buy 4 Man Teepee Tent at Argos.co.uk - Your Online Shop for Limited stock Sports and leisure.

Even if you only use it once a year at Ripley like me it's worth it. It even packs down pretty small, I did bring it to Ripley on a Serow after all.
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  #13  
Old 17 Sep 2011
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cowboys and indians

That Argos teepee tent looks the business for that price , how do they hold up in windy conditions
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  #14  
Old 18 Sep 2011
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Hi,

I used my $50 Iglu tent for more then 10 jears wild camping in europa and around africa (but left the two front sticks at home). Only after that time finaly the ziper broak so i got exactly the same to ride around southamerica now.

Transafrika - Riding on a motorbike through africa part 1

I think these days many people do have money but no experience with adventure so they dont know what to look for and get the moast expensiv stuff because they think this will be best but its not.

Travel save, Tobi

Last edited by ta-rider; 13 Jan 2013 at 11:25.
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  #15  
Old 21 Sep 2011
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Quote:
Originally Posted by lynch180 View Post
That Argos teepee tent looks the business for that price , how do they hold up in windy conditions
Tepi's generally stand up to wind pretty good as they're shaped like a cone. The wind acts on them the same in any direction. The Argos one has lots of pegs and guy ropes so I would say it's as good as any other. One thing, which is common to all Scandinavian tipi/lavvu type tents is there is no sewn in ground sheet and it is only a single skin. It has a "skirt" around the base which is designed to be weighted down with snow to provide a seal in the winter. You could use earth or rocks in the summer if it got really windy but otherwise a bit of a draught will blow up your skirt. Which is quite nice on a summer evening!

The groundsheet on the Argos one is held in place with lots of adjustable webbing straps and if you take the time to position it correctly, as I did, then the wind can only lift it a small way before the strap stops it. This goes with the territory with this type of tent. This design allows you to roll back half of the groundsheet and get inside with your wet and muddy gear before changing into your smoking jacket for a relaxing evening by the fire. Tepi living is the dogs in bad weather. The mozzies can get in though as it's not a sealed compartment like most sewn-in tents. This is so you can pitch it without the groundsheet on uneven ground. Then you sleep on a camp bed or in a bivvy bag and commune with nature. Once you've laid down your reindeer skins and fired up the wood burning stove it's just like home!!
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