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Description

StayFresh camping.

When you’re sharing a tent with three other people, you need all the ventilation you can get. The Alps Mountaineering Lynx AL 4-Person Tent features four half-mesh walls for excellent breathability and seam-sealed fly and floor construction for three-season camping protection.
  • Free standing two-pole system assembles easily with tent’s clips
  • Urethane-coated polyester fly resists water and UV damage
  • Urethane-coated floor and sealed fly and floor seams keep rain and snow out
  • 2 Vestibules for ample gear storage
  • Gear loft and internal mesh pockets allow you to store smaller gear off the floor

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ALPS Mountaineering Lynx AL 4 Tent 4-Person 3-Season

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Here's what others have to say...

4 5

Kyle Hilsabeck

Member since 
  • Gender: Male
  • Familiarity: I've put it through the wringer

I have the 2 person version of this tent, purchased at $130 - apparently not available anymore (at least not on backcountry) but I imagine the same pro's/con's are there for the 4 person.
Why this tent is awesome: floor space, head space, gear loft, dual vestibules, lots of mesh (ie ventilation), rainfly vents, lightweight, low price, ease of setup/tear down, and I really liked the windows in the rainfly that many tents don't have. It's gotten me through 4+ weeks in the CO rockies, a week in Alaska (July - but still cold, windy, rainy, snowy), and countless nights in Iowa and Wisconsin. I've never had condensation issues or any other moisture problems.
The downside: After the first year the rainfly windows started becoming stiff/brittle and have small holes in them - almost like the plastic is degrading. Also, I woke up one night on a mountain in Colorado with wind gusts over 40 mph - I thought either a person fell on the tent or a bear was attacking me, but it was just the wind collapsing the tent on me. It ripped 5 stakes out of the ground and flung them over 20 feet away and bent one of the tent poles in several spots. What you gain on price, you loose in durability and longevity. That being said, even with bent poles, it held up just fine in strong winds in Alaska. I'm happy with my purchase and it was recommended to me by a Colorado man who's used it on over 20 trips summiting 14ers.

3 5

Mr S

Member since 

It's hard coming up with a rating for this tent. It's a good idea and appears to be fairly well implemented. I basically bought this as a cheap alternative to the Marmot Limelight tent. It does a decent job of it. The tent stakes are much less heavy duty, but the design is there. The reason I gave it such a poor rating is due to it breaking the first night we went to use it. It set up fine at home, but when we were in the mountains, the black strap that connects the tent corners to the pole pin and stake ring just came off. The stitching clearly wasn't good. This left me with trying to fix it with fishing hooks and fishing line, which I eventually did. We had little faith in the tent the rest of the trip and ended up returning it. I'll be buying a nicer brand tent (Marmot, REI, etc) next time.

is there a footprint for this? can't seem...

Jeremiah

Member since 
Posted on

is there a footprint for this? can't seem to find one on alps site.

Brandon Smith

Member since 
Responded on

http://www.alpsmountaineering.com/ALPSMountaineeringTentAccessories.htm

They call it a 4 person floor saver. They are hard to find online. If you are car camping just buy a tarp from a hardware store and use it as a footprint.