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- The North Face Solo 12 Tent 1-Person 3-Season - 2007
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The North Face Solo 12 Tent 1-Person 3-Season - 2007
2007 Model Permanently Out of Stock
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The North Face Solo 12 Tent 1-Person 3-Season - 2007
The North Face Solo 12 one-person Tent gives you 18sq ft of room and only weighs about as much as a bivy sack. This Flight Series three season tent keeps you dry with its weatherproof fabric, a seam-sealed canopy and a fully taped floor. Even though you're protected from the elements, you won't have to suffer a night of stuffy air with The North Face's top and lower vents... The North Face's Featherlite poles keep weight to a minimum and provide The North Face Solo 12 with the strength to withstand a strong storm.
Bottom Line: When you're cutting weight, but bivy sacks are just too tight, grab The North Face Solo 12 one-person Tent.
Talk shop with all the gear freaks out there: ask 'em questions, upload/browse photos, and give your 2¢.
NO GOOD
By: Gregory Stamey
2 days ago
This tent is dangerous in colder weather. The condensation which builds up inside is enough to where it will drip down and soak your bag and build puddles on the sides. I have never seen something like this before. This could double as a coffin if used in cold weather.
ALMOST Perfect?!
By: Anonymous
July 13, 2007
Well. The tent is light and will hold up to the elements. More roomy than a solo bivy, which is nice if you want a little space to sleep. However, at 6'2", it is a tight fit for lenght. Great head clearance. Beter than the Particle 13.
DOWNSIDE: It doesn't breath at all. even with the vents open. Even after a low humidity night it must have been raining inside. You might as well sleep under the stars if good weather a bugs will permit.
So its use is limited to the thundershowers that soak everything or very wet climates.
I hike alot in the desert sand and this tent HAS to be free standing.
I hike alot in the desert sand and this tent HAS to be free standing. Is it? Also, how much mesh is on the tent itself? Can't see through the fly in the photo.
By: Bucky
March 3, 2009
The Tech Specs say that it is freestanding, but it looks like it needs stakes in the picture (for the fly at least). As far as the amount of mesh goes, I'm not sure. Check thenorthface.com for alternate views.If you're in the desert won't you leave the fly on to keep the sand out though?
There is no fly, it's one layer, only mesh is for venting. This is not a freestanding tent. There are 7 anchor tabs for stakes. The tent will stay standing with two anchor points, one on the foot end and one at the head, but if there is wind it's gonna move. I am planning on using it for South West desert camping and I think it will do fine.
By: Gregory Stamey
March 14, 2009
The tent is not freestanding. It requires a minimum of three stakes (two at the head and one at the feet) to stand and is best if you set all seven.
(Sorry for some reason this posted twice but i didn't get to finish)
As far as mesh goes- there is very little. There is no separate rainfly for this tent. (Technichally when you pull out the front two tabs and stake them off it creates a small fly space between that section and the actual tent and the small pole that runs a short length of the tent on top creates a small lifted section.) But basically it's just a single wall tent (essentially the whole tent is the rainfly). It's why it's so light and why it doesn't breathe very well creating moisture inside (a lot of the moisture is coming from you breathing).
The small section at the head under the "fly" has some mesh running around the sides- maybe about 3" tall around those 3 sections near the ground. Under the upper "fly" there are two vents you can unzip- each about the size of half a CD, and at the feet I believe there are two small vents with a little bit of mesh on them. All of these are to help with venting. I leave my upper two vents open all the time. It seems to help it breathe some but you still get a lot of moisture inside the tent each night.
I think it's a really good tent for what it is. But you have to have realistic expectations. It's an amazingly light tent and gives you a little more space than a bivy to move around and keep some gear inside (not much). I'm 6'1". I'd guess at around 6'3"ish you'd probably start to be pushing the length limits of this tent. I bought it for use in kayak overnighting and it's been pretty good for that. Very light and very compact. Just got off cataract canyon and two of our nights had a lot of rain and crazy winds. It held up well. The amount of moisture inside after those nights was no different than any other of the nights. I usually have an MSR Packtowel with me and i use that or a sponge from my boat and just wipe down the walls inside in the morning. It's not perfect but there are always going to be tradeoffs. I guess North Face could make it out of Gore-Tex but the price would probably be at least double and it would be a good bit heavier.
Other than that, it's typical North Face. Made very well. I'd rate it maybe 3.5 stars. If it could breathe better I'd bump it up a star. If it were freestanding at about the same weight/pack size then I'd give it 5 stars. Or if it had more space to sit up and change inside at same weight/ pack size- five stars.
Hope that helps.
By: acetomato1270764
April 21, 2009
nice backup
By: Rick Agostin
November 7, 2008
As others have commented it's got some ventalation problems. but I us it as a back-up to my hammock and it's great for emergencies.
Light!
By: Mike Traslin
February 16, 2009
I get clastraphobic when I am in a bivy.This tent is a good alternative.I wish it was free standing.
You have to set all the pegs in place in the ground for it to stand up.If you were car camping it would be nice if you could place it anywhere
with out setting the pegs!
Not for a wet climate
By: cbbrown401057419
October 3, 2008
Used it to do the Colorado trail so slept in it for 30 nights. Easy to set up and you cant beat the weight. However when its damp outside it rains inside I had to dry out my sleeping bag everyday.Would be good for the desert but not for the mountains
not for you Mr. tall guy
By: Dennis Lacerte
May 9, 2009
If your tall ( over 6 feet) you are not really going to fit well at all
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