Very kewl!
The Gazelle tents...hmm.!
I guess I should have applied for a patent when I added a second door to the Clam Pavilion we bought. I tried to offer the idea to Clam, but got no reply other than it would void my warranty. Apparently Gazelle is actually smart enough to do it.Very kewl!
The Gazelle tents...hmm.!
I guess I should have applied for a patent when I added a second door to the Clam Pavilion we bought. I tried to offer the idea to Clam, but got no reply other than it would void my warranty. Apparently Gazelle is actually smart enough to do it.![]()
I think you could use it as you describe, and that wold probably put the bumper pretty close to gazebo's screened main opening, but would leave more room inside.
Seems like a good idea to me.I also am intrigued by that Gazelle Gazebo - particularly because it has that built in "awning."
Our CI has a roof rack with rails on it - what does the assembled wisdom think about the possibility of forgoing the awning poles on the gazebo and instead tying the awning eyelets to the roof rack rails with para cord?
In my brain that doesn't do spatial reasoning very well, that would essentially extend the awning of the gazebo over the galley area of the CI, offering some rain/sun cover for the galley and leaving the entire gazebo open for seating/pets/etc.
Yes, we were very interested getting a NB for that very reason, but the Clam/Gazelle just goes up so much quicker and easier with a similar amount of space, that I decided to figure out how to add that second opening for egress to match the one advantage I felt the NB did have.Seems like a good idea to me.
I was also EDIT...(wondering if you could)snip
Ah, I see your profile pic; shows it well: the Clam open door end snuggles up around the tail end of the CI, and open the galley inside (just like you can with a New Breeze square tent...).
And the advantage over the Clam by having the D door on the other side means you can duck out opposite the galley.
Clam shoulda listened to ya, Dustin!
+1 on trying variations, yes to dirty6, seems to me you could position the Gazelle or Clam just like a traditional square tent in various places and use the awning as a connector of sorts, like a covered breezeway over galley, or off to a side with awning giving rain cover to CI side door, etc.
Thanks Dustin!Yes, we were very interested getting a NB for that very reason, but the Clam/Gazelle just goes up so much quicker and easier with a similar amount of space, that I decided to figure out how to add that second opening for egress to match the one advantage I felt the NB did have.
Sweeney you have become the resident tent aficionado, methinks!There just went $550 bucks.
The Gazelle tent looks like it checks the boxes. The clam style shelters are great for easy setup but the screens always cut off so much airflow...this looks pretty good, definitely would extend the camping season a few weeks on either end.
Then the coffee press ....yah... it looks like a Kickstarter project we sponsored, and got like 1.5 million more than they asked for and don't you know, they never shipped a product? jerks. The good news is the OVRLNDR mug is available today.
I don't know why it took me so long to get to this...
Sweeney you have become the resident tent aficionado, methinks!
Looking forward to your product review.
Here is another CI owner pic of their CI tucked into the back of a CI, on the side vs centered. (Found in old posts, screenshotted saved for my later reference)
I've tried placing the NB tent all the way forward, centered on CI with room to fulky raise galley and cook bug free but just barely- theres room to sit in chairs backed up to the galley, looking out on the rain....
By putting the forward end of tent just beyond the hinge of the doors.
I'm gonna play with the NB and do some sewing myself to make the cutout needed to allow tent screens to hang naturally and ideally zip to the optional NB floor.This would be with front side just beyond galley hinge at aft end of fender, so a side tent would be needed in addition to NB for avoiding shocking the neighbors in my undies...watering the roses.
I got on Amazon and ordered a couple leather/heavy tent material type awls and needles kits with heavy thread and zipper pulls, so hopefully can get to it soon...
vs take it to a sail loft, so I can experiment myself, on what works...and report back here...
Then if I botch it up, justify following your lead on the Gazelle if thats even better.
No rush a good winter-speing project!
Home sewing Pics to follow.
Thanks Dustin!
Ya I really like how that looks in your profile picture. Do you have more high rez pics to share?
Ya the NB is more work to setup; have not timed it but I'd guess 30 min for one perosn if you guy out all four corners with stakes for wind, and a bit more if you are snuggling it over the CI to find and attach places to tie down.
The NB holds up surprisingly well in my small use under several instances of winds I'd estimate as up to 35-40 gusting on storm front passage in Panhandle, inc left alone a couple days with first tropical depression of the season,
but that was in a park with open area under pines, branches cut back pretty high 20-30' not on a bare plain, And with 8 guy lines staked out on all four corners to the traditional bent frame, awnings tied down to flat sided slanted walls and slanted roof shape.
(So the Gazelle cite of 60mph sounds impressive, like Cosmo's youtubes on the Clam in some weather)
Dustin (or others) How well does the Clam open and fit over the CI?
1. Do you just set up the Clam then snuggle it in over the rear of CI until you get to the tires?
1b. Does the Clam have a zip on floor option?
(The NB does but have not used it yet.)
2. Does the Galley door touch the Clam roof when open? Any wear or tearing of fabric if the winds blow hard? (The NB 12x12 is big enough it does not touch but of course I generally would close galley hatch at night if only to keep the masked bandits and other critters out of the yummies there.)
3. How warm does it get under Clam roof when cooking, tucked in like that?
(One thing I like about the NB is there is a roof peak vent but it still gets pretty sweaty under it when cooking on a warm day, so its a toss up on opening the end doors to let extra breeze in vs keep out the skeeters!)
So I'd like the Gazelle side vents for opening for more breeze when able.
4. Do you have the AC option on the CI?
If so, How warm does the Clam get if you have it snuggled up far enough to capture the condenser heat vent?
(One thing you dont want to do on the NB is run both AC and try cooking too long under the NB all zipped up awnings down, say for heavy rain...unless you are looking for the saw-u-na experience...
5. How well does the rectangular door opening on the Clam match the CI profile? Looks pretty close no adjustment needed?
(The NB ends are zippered center so its not a perfect fit at all, sort off stretches the zippered sides up and around and tugs the bottom up off the ground so I'm gonna copy what a couple others have done and cut/sew a removable insert to fit more snugly-for better bug control, and see if it can retain more heat on cold days use...zipped floor on...testing in cold wx coming so we'll see...)
The Clam reinforced wind walls look pretty easy, and stood up well in Cosmo's winter camp youtube...
So its "to be determined" on the Gazelle how those flat tied down flaps hold up to wind. Think I'll wait for another beta tester to go first...
Very interested!