Interesting. Have you used this in the rain with the doors open?
The height of this and the short overhang makes it look like it would not keep rain out.
Interesting. Have you used this in the rain with the doors open?
The height of this and the short overhang makes it look like it would not keep rain out.
Right now I have two aluminum billets attached ‘permanently’ to the beef bar. They are drilled to take a short shock corded tent pole (maybe 20"?) on each side and two 1/4" X 4’ aluminum rods in the back. The hexagonal tarp fits over the end of those poles. In order to keep the rear poles apart I cut another shock corded tent pole the length of the rear edge of the tarp as a spreader. For the front two corners I just tie them forward with a short line to a couple of hangers from Lumbering Bear. It only takes a couple minutes to set up/take down but has to be done with the GFC closed, which means no adjustment when the top is open. I’m toying with tarp clips to either guy it better or maybe be able to extend/retract it with the GFC open.
In ‘light’ rain with no wind it does okay. It extends beyond the plane of the tailgate on my Tacoma, so the rear door is pretty well covered. Side doors aren’t covered as well but still okay if the rain is falling straight down. Amazon sells a XXL tarp of the same geometry (this is the XL) that would provide better coverage, but it just feels like it has too much sail area to secure, and I would want a larger diameter rod in the rear if it was longer than 4’. I haven’t tested it in any wind to speak of. Is it a great fix? Probably not, but I like the coverage better than the stock set up.
I’m trying to envision combining your setup with the gzilla pole/fly setup. To give a lower profile better coverage setup, but still allowing full use of the doors.
I like yours because it keeps the fly setup while having the privacy and closure of the doors if needed. That’s why I don’t have the gzilla setup because you have to remove all of it if you want to close the doors.
I’m still tweaking the bend in those rear poles (among other things) to figure out the right ratio of max view to max coverage. As it is now there is 30" of ‘overhang’ over the rear door and 30" max over the side door (that tapers down to about 14").
I like it! Looking forward to seeing how you tweak your design as you use it more.
Here’s what I did, but I wouldn’t want to do my approach for all 3 doors, it would take way too long to setup. My single door awning gives me cover to get in when it’s pouring rain, and I can attach the GFC side door to the awning, which lets me watch the rain from inside the GFC. I’ve had it on in strong winds too. So far, so good.
That looks like it would provide better protection from the rain and stand up better in wind, but is much more involved to set up. My hope is that all this brainstorming will lead somebody to come up with a simple and effective solution!
yeah, I’m happy with how my awning performs in bad conditions, it’s quick to add and remove to my camper with the twist lock fasteners, but it’s a complicated build. And I don’t know if everyone’s tent door sizes are the same, so it might be a super custom build. Your approach has the potential to be more simple and universal. Pro’s for your design
Probably the best design I have seen thus far tbh. Honestly, I bet you could even create some sort of “annex” with poles and more if one truly wanted to!
I’m thinking if we combined a couple of these ideas, we’d have some good success. I like what @OverlandKyle did with the wedge material. What if instead of cordura, the wedge shapes were a thicker clear vinyl? Would allow maximum airflow while still having decent visibility. Just pop on a couple of awning poles and bingo.
May have just given myself a lay-off project to try out.
Forgive me for asking what is probably very obviously a “no”, but do the gzila awning kits not keep out rain?
I could see a heavy rain getting in but they look to me like they should keep a moderate rain out of the tent. I’m looking to buy a set of 3, but if they can’t keep rain out I don’t really see any point.
They do not in my past experience.
I made an awning for the side tent door. It works well, and handles the wind fine. But…I think the problem is that it’s not an easy build, so it’s probably a dead prototype idea. Just sharing in case it gives someone a better, simpler, build idea. Photos of the build process, click here and a youtube vid I made to show how it works
So they’re just a nifty ($300) thing that looks cool, but offers no functionality? I might cancel my order.
I’ve noticed if I park nose into the wind, and then keep the forward zippers closed and only prop open the back corners that it does pretty good at keeping the rain out while also letting air flow.
That’s great, thanks man. I’ll keep my order.
I was thinking about cutting down a pole set in order to do something similar, but it seems like your method accomplishes the same thing without modifications.
Can also get away with just 2 sets that way. This is a screenshot from the new V2 Pro video, but it shows how I have mine set up.
I did this about three years ago… works beautifully but I got tired of taking 10-15 minutes to line up the zippers every time so I just stopped using them…
Looking to sell? Ideally I’d like a set to match my tent color though…
Where did you get your bubble levels. I’ve seen a few like them on Amazon and elsewhere, but none that could be mounted like the ones you have.