Just some lateral thought....
I have a Zpacks hexamid twin, with mesh liner/floor, and a cuben floor insert for it. I'm happy with the setup, except that I can't see when you would ever use it without the floor, so am not sure why the mesh floor is there....? maybe just to make it cheaper, given the high basic cost. I'm thinking that, as I would never use it without the floor, I will prob just sew the floor in, and rid myself of some mesh, which only collects leaves and sticks.
In making a tent, like the pyramids you guys are talking about, why would you not just sew in a tub floor, even if using mesh sides. I'd rather have something that was insect , water, and creature proof, rather than fluffing around with removable mesh sides, and BYO groundsheet concepts. What other use do you have for a BYO groundsheet? Or is it that a plastic paint cloth isn't usefully attached to the tent...
With my hexamid, I'm going to extend the tub floor at the back, so it is higher, given that i now have all this Cuben, and tape, as this is the bit where the weather can get in.
I'm still debating whether I add a vestibule/verandah to my hexamid, or just use my recently acquired Zpacks cuben tarp in conjunction with tent to resolve the gear storage/sitting around outside when it rains issue....I suppose it all revolves around my ultimate use, which is backcountry NZ flyfishing (Sth Is, West Coast, in the high rainfall, sandfly ridden areas) where you mostly need sandfly protection ( they would get under "side flaps") and where most weeks it will rain a lot on one or two days, at which stage it is nice to stand under a tarp.
On Bogong 2 weekends ago, my hexamid would probably have survived the 70-90kmh winds, but it would have been nice to be able to pull the groundsheet up the back a bit more to reduce the wind coming in, and the tarp would have been useless.
Various gear, various uses.....
A