Bushwalking gear and paraphernalia. Electronic gadget topics (inc. GPS, PLB, chargers) belong in the 'Techno Babble' sub-forum.
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Bushwalk Inventory System can help bushwalkers with a variety of bushwalk planning tasks, including: Manage which items they take bushwalking so that they do not forget anything they might need, plan meals for their walks, and automatically compile food/fuel shopping lists (lists of consumables) required to make and cook the meals for each walk. It is particularly useful for planning for groups who share food or other items, but is also useful for individual walkers.
Mon 26 Jul, 2010 4:14 pm
For the second time now on chilly nights, I have been the only one to suffer Ice/Frost on my tent.
I have a MACPAC Minaret.
Recently I was camped with 2 MSR'S and they had no frost on them whatsoever, whereas my tent was like cardboard.
On a trip over easter, 2 of my walking buddies after a few drinks decided to write obscene words on all of our tents. As mine was the "frostiest" I copped all the attention.
I was just wondering if anyone else has noticed anything similar? Or do MACPAC use a certain fabric more likely to freeze over??
Mon 26 Jul, 2010 4:25 pm
I read the title, and was prompted to reply "Yes, the wet ones, depending on the temperature".
But to answer the content of your post, maybe the people in the MSR's had hotter person/s in them or something.
I have had heavy layers of frost on my Nallo in the past. And with the Snowcave I once had dew, then it got cold and the dew froze so rather than frost, it was ice. Yuk!
Mon 26 Jul, 2010 4:28 pm
Hmmm interesting. the other example I gave we had several people, and several different brands of tent. Mine was still the iciest (is that a word??)
Mon 26 Jul, 2010 4:40 pm
Being under trees versus in the open will make a big difference.
Mon 26 Jul, 2010 4:41 pm
1st time we were all in the open
Recent time there was some canopy for us all
Mon 26 Jul, 2010 4:43 pm
ILUVSWTAS wrote:1st time we were all in the open
Recent time there was some canopy for us all
Well, you do say you sleep cold? Maybe there is something in what tasadam said?
...and MJD and I ARE hot.
Mon 26 Jul, 2010 4:45 pm
Yeh that thought crossed my mind too. I was toasty and warm the other night though. You witnessed the stiffness I was suffering (and all you dirty minded people out there I am talking about the TENT)
Mon 26 Jul, 2010 5:18 pm
ollster wrote:ILUVSWTAS wrote:1st time we were all in the open
Recent time there was some canopy for us all
Well, you do say you sleep cold? Maybe there is something in what tasadam said?
...and MJD and I ARE hot.
I assume we will see both you on the BWT fully exposed calander, maybe posing after a swim in Lake Tauhne mid winter so the steam from your hotness can moderate the impact on the general public
Pretty well have not noticed much diffence in the frost levels of tents pitched in similar conditons. All either sparkle or look un affected. Might be a secret fabric from some devious communist research program from the Peoples Republic of Vietnam, home of free speach and open government
Cheers Brett
Mon 26 Jul, 2010 5:39 pm
Brett wrote:I assume we will see both you on the BWT fully exposed calander, maybe posing after a swim in Lake Tauhne mid winter so the steam from your hotness can moderate the impact on the general public
Pretty well have not noticed much diffence in the frost levels of tents pitched in similar conditons. All either sparkle or look un affected. Might be a secret fabric from some devious communist research program from the Peoples Republic of Vietnam, home of free speach and open government
Cheers Brett
Ew, ew, ew for the first comment, and lol at the second. Maybe Macpac have labs in North Korea?
Mon 26 Jul, 2010 5:45 pm
Maybe your better insulated. The warmer the house, the more snow on the roof.
Perhaps, too much hot in those other tents melting, melting.....
Regards,
Ken
Mon 26 Jul, 2010 7:23 pm
My what a lovely thread i've started here
Mon 26 Jul, 2010 7:38 pm
ILUVSWTAS wrote:My what a lovely thread i've started here

Indeed.
Could the question be reworded to
"What activities do you do in your tent to stop the ice from forming?"
My guess is they won't include the word "frigid"...
Mon 26 Jul, 2010 7:44 pm
Hehehe Im not sure what you mean Adam? Could you explain it in detail to this poor innocent soul?
Mon 26 Jul, 2010 7:53 pm
ollster wrote:Brett wrote:I assume we will see both you on the BWT fully exposed calander, maybe posing after a swim in Lake Tauhne mid winter so the steam from your hotness can moderate the impact on the general public
Pretty well have not noticed much diffence in the frost levels of tents pitched in similar conditons. All either sparkle or look un affected. Might be a secret fabric from some devious communist research program from the Peoples Republic of Vietnam, home of free speach and open government
Cheers Brett
Ew, ew, ew for the first comment, and lol at the second. Maybe Macpac have labs in North Korea?
The lab's in Vietnam I think!

And (and i will say i don't know what you folks really look like...) If you all are really HOT maybe some pics & diagrams could help the explanation?!

- Definately get a few people onto the forum huh?
Mon 26 Jul, 2010 8:00 pm
Um?
It is minus four outside a hut that is 19 degrees inside but two people decided to tent on the weekend. Err? the tent still looked icy so what were they doing wrong?
Cheers Brett
Mon 26 Jul, 2010 8:06 pm
ILUVSWTAS wrote:Hehehe Im not sure what you mean Adam? Could you explain it in detail to this poor innocent soul?
That would be against forum rules...
Mon 26 Jul, 2010 8:11 pm
Ha! Fair enough. I'd better behave myself and not say another word....
Mon 26 Jul, 2010 8:32 pm
*shrug*
Maybe I have bad taste, but Mark looks hot enough for me . . .
Tue 27 Jul, 2010 8:17 am
north-north-west wrote:*shrug*
Maybe I have bad taste, but Mark looks hot enough for me . . .
It's been a while since I have been speechless.
Tue 27 Jul, 2010 8:48 am
Look out Mark!!!
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Tue 27 Jul, 2010 6:00 pm
Maybe a user name change is required... ILUVNNWTAS???
Tue 27 Jul, 2010 6:09 pm
Now im going to have to pretend not to like her just to keep my gruff smartass image intact!!
Give these morons an inch NNW, and they'll take a mile!
Tue 27 Jul, 2010 10:42 pm
2 if we can get away with it (harmlessly of course)
Thu 29 Jul, 2010 4:17 am
Mark - may seem silly, but what is the colour of your tent? May have an effect on refrigerant cooling? Is it a lighter colour than your companionses? Perhaps your ventilation is also different - gotta let that moist breath out, otherwise it will just stick to the walls and roof.
Thu 29 Jul, 2010 4:21 am
I have a dark green Minaret. Probably has better ventilation than the MSR??
Doesnt seem silly, seems quite logical Swifty
Thu 29 Jul, 2010 9:25 am
Hi Mark,
My microlight did the same thing recently. Of the four tents camped out in the open, it iced up pretty quickly compared to other tents. On this occasion there were four tents and mine was the only MacPac tent. It's one of the newer tents and dark green in colour.
I was thinking the reverse to others in that the material or the surface treatment was such that it did not allow too much water to move through it or into the fabric and thus more surface water. I also considered that colour contrast between the ice and the fabric colur might have been the difference, but one of the other tents was dark blue and this tent did not have anywhere near as much ice as mine.
I have also had greater condensation problems inside this tent than my other tents, so I am assuming that breathability isn't the greatest. It seems to work better when I open the tent up a bit, but you can't always do this.
On another side topic. Pity the microlight doesn't have a two way zip on the fly. I would love to open up the fly from the top just for a small opening and a bit of ventilation, but the designers have made it so that you have to reach out and pull the zip up from the bottom.
Cheers
Andrew
Thu 29 Jul, 2010 9:55 am
I have been checking out a range of materials lately....
Some layered waterproof (especially breathable) fabrics seem to have a barrier membrane stuck to the inside of thee material (particularly the stronger fabrics - this means the base material gets WET but the water cant get past the inside waterproof layer. This woiuld mean that this material can freeze with the water in it...
Other fabrics have been treated throughout their depth and dont let any water into the material and therefore (i guess) wouldn't freeze as easily??
check out this website (no connection to me):
http://www.therainshed.com/ and look at some of the descriptions of their waterproof breathable stuff compared to the silicon impregnated fabrics?
I am only guessing but it makes logical sense to me?
Thu 29 Jul, 2010 3:04 pm
Hey Andrew. Yes I've heard the microlight is a shocker for condensation. I also had the same thought about the MACPAC fabric, but the condensation thing doesnt really back this up.
That's just another thing I LOVE about my minaret. I have never had any moisutre inside the tent.
Interesting Liam, we seem to be getting somewhere close to the truth.....
Fri 30 Jul, 2010 9:55 am
Just throwing an idea out there on a slightly different track! Has anyone though about the air space between the fly and inner tent?? Some tent designs may have a larger or smaller volume of air between the two, the larger the space the less effect body heat would have on it and the more likely the air/fly is to drop below the dew point and form dew and frost
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