Certainly not your average (well, not my average) carbon pole as this is made to flex rather than be rigid. This is a quick proto to see how flawed my thinking is but so far, so good. If things continue in this positive manner, I'm hoping for a full tarp set-up at less than 150g that provides full coverage.
You can ignore the heatshrink - that's there to stop the spigots having me in the eye when the thing shatters
Not thinking straight, today, for various reasons here, but a/ blimey! but b/ in what situ would a flexi pole be more beneficial (or 'not less beneficial') than a rigid one? Or maybe it's a parallel situ to the 'totally stiff frames are best' when in reality we all know that wibbly wobbly steel ones are MUCH nicer .
Oh, and c/ may I have a couple please .
"My God, Ponsonby, I'm two-thirds of the way to the grave and what have I done?" - RIP
"At least you got some stories" - James Acaster
"A little nonsense now and then is relished by the wisest men" - WW
Intention is to pass them through sleeves in the tarp and use them to form arches Reg. As a whole, it should produce a fairly stable shelter ... hopefully
Ho hum, of course . Sigh, never mind not thinking straight, am thinking totally bent today.. back to my cage...
My feeble excuse is have only used tarp for ages so no longer understand the concept of 'sleeves' etc.. my head was turned by the shapely 11g bit.. that'll (not) teach me a lesson..
"My God, Ponsonby, I'm two-thirds of the way to the grave and what have I done?" - RIP
"At least you got some stories" - James Acaster
"A little nonsense now and then is relished by the wisest men" - WW
Flexible enough Scott - you can bend a 3 section, 1m pole over 180 degrees. A longer pole would obviously offer more bend. As with a rigid pole, the spigots are going to be the weakest link but hopefully still plenty strong enough.
I have 6mm carbon pole. I haven't cut it yet. Heatshrink?
Can I just cut it with a hacksaw and use it or is there more to it than that?
Wrap it in masking tape and use a fine tooth hacksaw blade (32tpi). A quick rub round the cut edge with a fine file will finish it off. The heatshrink is on these because I'm bending them and it will prevent the spigiots popping off should it all go wrong. However, yes carbon will sometimes shatter ... are you using the 6mm for tarp poles? It's pretty thin (borderline too thin) if you are, so expect plenty of flexing and possible snapping, unless they're very short poles.
If they work Stu reckon you can knock one up for my helium
Doubtful Stuart - these are only 3mm (rod not tube). You'll need something like 8mm which is too rigid to bend safely.
Yes, for a tarp. One metre height. I chose 6mm because it seemed stiff enough in the shop. But I haven't tried it in the field. It won't be for gusty Welsh nights, more summer Alps. But if it works then I will get a thicker one for the UK.
The spigots on any pole are the weak point Ant. You'd be hard pressed to break a 1 piece 6mm pole (if it's quality carbon) under notmal conditions but the joining spogots ... not so much. Angling the pole of vertical will also place the spigots under greater load, so aim to keep it straight with all the forces passing straight down through the pole, so as not to exert and sideways force through the joints.
Now that's an interesting idea. I've seen them in pics for the Cloudcover tarp that goes with a WB Ridgerunner.
Will watch this thread with interest and if you want some dim's or a tester let me know (or if you want the tarp to frig around with I don't mind sending it over).
Now that's an interesting idea. I've seen them in pics for the Cloudcover tarp that goes with a WB Ridgerunner.
Will watch this thread with interest and if you want some dim's or a tester let me know (or if you want the tarp to frig around with I don't mind sending it over).
I've got a Superfly (as well as the Cloudburst) which is bombproof and great in grim / winter conditions. Those Thunderflys and the various sized variations look good. Used yours yet and any feedback? Get it form the States direct? I hesitate to ask what it all cost.
Cheeky Monkey wrote:I've got a Superfly (as well as the Cloudburst) which is bombproof and great in grim / winter conditions. Those Thunderflys and the various sized variations look good. Used yours yet and any feedback? Get it form the States direct? I hesitate to ask what it all cost.
Sorry Stu - off on a tangent
Got it in the summer, no bad weather testing yet. Got the Warbonnet Eldarado (XLC with smaller bugnet) at the same time with some Dutchware Gear for rigging. Was due to the US on business so bought during a holiday sale but trip got cancelled so ended up shipping into the UK.
Importing some Dutchware Gear and will be selling in the UK soon.