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Black Diamond Beta Light Shelter
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Black Diamond Beta Light Shelter
The floorless Black Diamond Beta Light Shelter protects two backpackers from the elements and only adds a scant 19-ounces to your pack. Pitch the Beta Light with the two trekking poles you already have with you, and relax in the massive 34.7sq feet of interior space. Thanks to Black Diamond's use of ultralight 30D SilNylon material, this spacious shelter packs to an incredibly small 4 x 6 inches.
Bottom Line: The Black Diamond Beta Light Shelter provides a tent-size space out of the rain at less weight than most bivy sacks.
Talk shop with all the gear freaks out there: ask 'em questions, upload/browse photos, and give your 2¢.
Beta Light -- indispensable tent replacement
By: Josh
June 15, 2009
The beta light should be the shelter of choice for those that travel with trekking/ski poles. I have used mine for 4 years with 50+ days per year. It is light, weatherproof (as long as you take the time to seam seal it well with syl-nylon seam seal), compressable, and very secure. I have used this thing in winter, summer, high winds (Mt. Rainier) and the only place where I wish I had a tent is when there are bugs (you can combine with the beta bug, but then it's nearly as heavy as my tent).
Pluses -- wickedly light, easy to setup, and well designed
Minuses -- If you are base-camping, you must collapse your shelter to use your poles each day. Must be carefully seam-sealed.
Do you know if this is the tent seen in "Real Simple"
Do you know if this is the tent seen in "Real Simple" magazine this month?
By: lisa.cheek2193506
April 28, 2008
It certainly is however with childlike adornments added. Here's the link:http://www.realsimple.com/realsimple/gallery/0,21863,17
By: Jeff Gerhard
October 19, 2008
Great but,
By: david rogers
June 23, 2008
This is a great shelter. I love how light and compact it is, and that is stows away easily. my only two complaints are that it needs factory taped seams instead of seam grip. Also the trekking poles in the middle get in the way when your getting busy in the woods with you partner. I would recommend bringing some guy-line with you for tying the tent up to a tree or something, then you can get rid of the annoying poles in you and your partners way.
why does it look like theres a floor in the picture?
why does it look like theres a floor in the picture?
By: brvheart5485415
April 22, 2008
because you can buy a floor to go with it dummy
By: david rogers
June 4, 2008
Spring Ski Shelter of Choice
By: fusionboy
June 4, 2007
Great for spring skiing trips with just a partner. It's light, imminently packable and can handle a surprising amount of weather.
If you've got more than 2 people total the megalight is right for you.
Top class engineering
By: daniel2155251
July 14, 2008
Don't expect this to be better than a fully enclosed tent with a good fly sheet for weather protection...but considering how light it is, anyone considering it, is weight conscious and therefore in my opinion for a 2 man shelter in its weight range it can't be beaten. It fills the little niche right between a classic A-frame open ended tarp and a lightweight 2-man tent.
Betamid light
By: JD Bkpkr
July 28, 2004
This is a great shelter if you use Trekking poles. This works for me. The Sil Nylon is a great material and is extremely weather resistant. However, in extremely wet environemnts condensation forms and will drip on you a bit, but it really is nothing when there is a monsoon outside and you are dry inside. It is roomy and light which makes it near perfect. I have sewn bug netting around the bottom and it is well worth the couple of extra ounces. All around it is my favorite backpacking shelter to date and I've had it for more than a year. Oh... Silnet is a must for the seams.
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