One man set up is one of the things that make this tent so appealing to us. Thank you for taking the time to share this with us. Thanks again and have a blessed week. Dale
Thanks for the video. My SpringBar Classic Jack is scheduled to arrive today. As soon as the house sells I’m going camping in the Classic Jack for the next year. Cheers 👍🍺 P.S I’m settling it up in the front yard as soon as it arrives.😎
@@nativeoutdoors1780 The house hasn’t sold yet . I set the tent up in the backyard about 2 weeks ago. It was a one person setup and not that difficult. I live in South Florida so it’s still hot here. The area I live in is about a 1/2 block from the ocean, down a 2 track dirt road. Lots of mosquitoes and noseeums …the house is basically surrounded by mangrove swamps. We do have power, running water and flush toilets… most of the time🤣. I did use a ryobi battery operated fan both nights with all the canvas windows open. No problem with the bugs at all during the night. Early in the morning I did here the Bobcat howling a couple of times but otherwise it was a quiet night. Also slept on a cot . Once the weather changes I’ll set it up again. My Winnerwell stove arrived 2 weeks ago and I set that up in driveway and cooked a pan pizza on that . Worked Great. Hope this helps out a little .👍😎 I did spray the tent down with a garden hose after the weekend and let it dry.
@@nativeoutdoors1780 Many years ago I worked at a elk camp in NW Wyoming. Loved it . Florida is too crowded now. I’m going to travel and camp for a year once the house sells.
I've had cavan tents, I mean they where old my Dad set them up for me in the back yard when I was a kid. I'm now 58. The canvas used today is far better. It could be your last tent you will buy. I don't know if these tents have any UV pertectant in the faberic, but if it does its worth it. Plus this tent goes up far easier than the tents of old by a long shot. Looks good I'm going to look into these more closer.
really nice tent and impressive & seriously wanting one. BUT, sure would like to see attachment points on the outside walls connecting to the poles and then attachment points on the poles for cord to attach so as to reinforce the poles by staking them out to the ground. The lack of these points is the one main concern I have about purchasing a springbar. just imagine yourself living in a tent that moves around like that in high winds. walls would cave in and your stuff would be all over the floor and you'd have to sleep in the middle of the tent to keep from getting beaten on by the walls. The pressure of the sudden force of air flow inside is extremely uncomfortable (been there, experienced it), you'd wouldn't be sleeping, even with ear plugs in. my nylon/poly dome tents have never had this much movement, not even in 60mph winds, because they have numerous stake out points and side wall attachments to their poles. Just saying from my nearly 40 years experience selling/using both small and large tents in harsh environments around the world. you gotta a good thing going spring bar, but seek outside the box- be willing to make changes- and you'll grab a whole other type of outdoor user group to purchase your tents.
You don't need to have guy lines off the walls, if it's staked out properly it's pretty taught, and on the skyliner you can put poles on the walls and guy them out if you don't use the awnings
They way springbar sells tents online is wrong. You have a tent and are checking out. Then someone else gets the tent your trying to pay for. I fell this is a bad business Practice.
Just set up my Outfitter Model for the first time in 20 years...........thanks for concise instructions........
One man set up is one of the things that make this tent so appealing to us. Thank you for taking the time to share this with us. Thanks again and have a blessed week.
Dale
⁰
Thanks for the video. My SpringBar Classic Jack is scheduled to arrive today. As soon as the house sells I’m going camping in the Classic Jack for the next year.
Cheers 👍🍺
P.S I’m settling it up in the front yard as soon as it arrives.😎
Have you been camping in it? How is it?
@@nativeoutdoors1780 The house hasn’t sold yet . I set the tent up in the backyard about 2 weeks ago. It was a one person setup and not that difficult. I live in South Florida so it’s still hot here. The area I live in is about a 1/2 block from the ocean, down a 2 track dirt road. Lots of mosquitoes and noseeums …the house is basically surrounded by mangrove swamps. We do have power, running water and flush toilets… most of the time🤣. I did use a ryobi battery operated fan both nights with all the canvas windows open. No problem with the bugs at all during the night. Early in the morning I did here the Bobcat howling a couple of times but otherwise it was a quiet night. Also slept on a cot . Once the weather changes I’ll set it up again.
My Winnerwell stove arrived 2 weeks ago and I set that up in driveway and cooked a pan pizza on that . Worked Great.
Hope this helps out a little .👍😎
I did spray the tent down with a garden hose after the weekend and let it dry.
@@jacklandismcgowan1413 yeah sweet, that's awesome sounds like a sweet set up haha pretty jealous we going into cold weather here in utah
@@nativeoutdoors1780 Many years ago I worked at a elk camp in NW Wyoming.
Loved it .
Florida is too crowded now. I’m going to travel and camp for a year once the house sells.
@@jacklandismcgowan1413 I gotta know...did your house ever sell?
I've had cavan tents, I mean they where old my Dad set them up for me in the back yard when I was a kid. I'm now 58. The canvas used today is far better. It could be your last tent you will buy. I don't know if these tents have any UV pertectant in the faberic, but if it does its worth it. Plus this tent goes up far easier than the tents of old by a long shot. Looks good I'm going to look into these more closer.
what kind of snow load can the handle?
really nice tent and impressive & seriously wanting one. BUT, sure would like to see attachment points on the outside walls connecting to the poles and then attachment points on the poles for cord to attach so as to reinforce the poles by staking them out to the ground. The lack of these points is the one main concern I have about purchasing a springbar. just imagine yourself living in a tent that moves around like that in high winds. walls would cave in and your stuff would be all over the floor and you'd have to sleep in the middle of the tent to keep from getting beaten on by the walls. The pressure of the sudden force of air flow inside is extremely uncomfortable (been there, experienced it), you'd wouldn't be sleeping, even with ear plugs in. my nylon/poly dome tents have never had this much movement, not even in 60mph winds, because they have numerous stake out points and side wall attachments to their poles. Just saying from my nearly 40 years experience selling/using both small and large tents in harsh environments around the world. you gotta a good thing going spring bar, but seek outside the box- be willing to make changes- and you'll grab a whole other type of outdoor user group to purchase your tents.
You don't need to have guy lines off the walls, if it's staked out properly it's pretty taught, and on the skyliner you can put poles on the walls and guy them out if you don't use the awnings
It's a really sturdy tent. I watched a good tent setup video that seems to be able to withstand strong winds. I want to communicate with you.
Great tent! Is the canvas a rip-stop canvas? Also, whats the make on the model of the shirt that Pace (the guy in the video) is wearing? Nice shirt!
Ouch. The comments. I own a Family Camper 7. Never leave home without it. Anything other than a Springbar isn't worth the money.
It hurts me to see this guy walk on the tent with his shoes!
They way springbar sells tents online is wrong. You have a tent and are checking out. Then someone else gets the tent your trying to pay for. I fell this is a bad business Practice.