Marmot Home Alone Tents

Marmot Home Alone Tents 

DESCRIPTION

· 1 person capacity · Three season tent

USER REVIEWS

Showing 1-6 of 6  
[Aug 29, 2004]
gogiboy
Day Hiker

This review is for the 2002 Marmot AT Tent, which doesn't have a listing on this site. The AT is most closely akin to the single-person Marmot Home Alone. Although the AT is listed as a two-person tent, it isn't. In fact at 5'10, 150 lbs I almost touch both ends of the tent when lying in the center. You can get a small amount of gear on either side or perhaps a small dog or child. There is little head room even at the vestibule end so if you like to sit up be careful. Strengths: Lightweight (3+ lbs), single wall construction, easy setup, cheerful color. Fairly inexpensive. A decent solo tent Weaknesses: Not really a two-person tent as advertised. Not much room to move about inside. Two small side vents don't allow for a lot air movement so if it's hot out in can get fairly stuffy. Conclusion: a well-made, lightweight, but small single-person tent whose strenghts outweight the weaknesses. I'd give it a 3.5 or 3.75 if the site allowed for further hair-splitting.

Customer Service

No judgement.

Similar Products Used:

Other tents over the years. Have currently upgraded to a Exped Sirrus Extreme for more room without too much weight penalty (less claustrophobic feeling).

OVERALL
RATING
3
VALUE
RATING
3
[Mar 21, 2004]
mel2004
Backpacker

Marmot usually makes a quality product, but I was surprised when using this tent. I used this on my 2003 AT thru-hike, and couldn't have had worst weather for a tent like this. It rained a LOT during this hike, and the Home Alone is not the tent you want during a rainy season. Condensation was horrible; the worst I've seen among the tents out there....and you are paying quite a bit, and carrying some weight for the limited amount of room in that tent. The floor space is decent, but nothing else. Of course, it did have nice ventilation, and was a good tent on sunny or dry days. I eventually learned to like my little reject bivy-style tent, but have purchased a different tent for this next trip.

Customer Service

n/a

Similar Products Used:

n/a

OVERALL
RATING
2
VALUE
RATING
2
[Apr 24, 2003]
ipuck
Backpacker

To start, unless you are doing dessert camping, DO NOT purchases this tent!! The tent has some major flaws. I used it on one trip and sold it! #1 flaw a single wall tent that does not breath. Sure there is a lot of mess and wind get in, but; this tent has serious condensation problems. The condensation builds on the top and drips down to you feet and under you. I tried to keep the tent dry by waking up in the night and keeping the condensation down. But it was too much for a cool Colorado night in the mountains. #2, the tent floor is very low. Wind whips through the tent (ideal for hot summer nights bad for the cool chilly mornings). I am a person who prefers cool to cold climate camping and the tent just made nights too cold and wet. I would have better luck under the stars. When it rains water could and will splash up into the tent, again making for a bad nights sleep. The good points of this tent are that it is a side loading 1 person tent and you can sit up in it. It was nice for that. You have lots of mesh around the sides. That is all I can think of for good points.

Customer Service

Sold it as fast as I could.

Similar Products Used:

Sierra Designs Flashlight CD and Kelty V2 (Vortex 2)

OVERALL
RATING
1
VALUE
RATING
1
[Dec 20, 2002]
Bill
Backpacker

I chose to carry this tent on my 2002 PCT thru hike for a couple of reasons: it's lightweight and it packs down very small. I had a love hate relationship with this thing. First the hate: Condensation is a huge problem even when fully vented (there is quite a bit of mesh on this tent). Later in the trip (in Oregon and Washington) a small leak developed that dripped on my face during steady rains. Marmot recommended I seam seal the whole thing which brings up the question: Why bother taping the the seams if you still have to seam seal it? After seam gripping the leak is still there. A possible design flaw? Now the love: Plenty of room inside the tent with a small vestibule that can hold your pack and shoes. Plus, you get a nifty window so you can watch your fellow hiking partners try to set up their tarps. The yellow nylon makes overcast, dreary days seem cheerful.

Customer Service

Marmot has been very helpful with the problems listed above. They have requested I send it back to them for inspection.

Similar Products Used:

Marmot Asylum, Mountain Hardware lightwedge 2

OVERALL
RATING
3
VALUE
RATING
3
[May 09, 2002]
Brian
Backpacker

The Good: Simple, lightweight & semi-freestanding design. Set-up is a snap. Really low profile sheds wind pretty nicely. The Bad: Two drawbacks, one minor, the other major. The former would be the fact you can''t sit up in this tent. If you''re OK with it (as I was), then it''s not a big deal. However, the second was a huge issue with me: Condensation! If you''re just going to be using it in dry situations, this single-wall tent will do you well. If a hint of moisture heads your way, you will find yourself pretty damp. Curious thing is, there''s plenty of mesh in this tent, but one downpour I found the entire inside of the canopy covered in water, making nice little puddles on the floor. It''s a shame, as I really liked the design of the tent... I returned it to REI soon thereafter.

Similar Products Used:

Mountain Hardwear Tri-Light 1 & 2

OVERALL
RATING
3
VALUE
RATING
4
[Oct 29, 2001]
WES
Backpacker

Strength:

None

Weakness:

None

Excellent light-weight tent...pitches easily (poles could be easier to identify, but I''m nit-picking), surprisingly roomy, well put together. No problems here.

Similar Products Used:

None

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
4
Showing 1-6 of 6  

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