gizmotron
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Bob Wells recently did a video of a very nice and expensive ($2,200) Teepee tent for people that need a tent to survive. I'm linking it here because the design is the same as this one, at least very close. It uses a single, very strong, painters extendable pole as the center pole that you can get at almost any Home Depot.
I use two products. One is HH-66 adhesive:
https://www.mytarp.com/products/hh-66-vinyl-cement
The other is 10oz to 14oz Vinyl Coated Polyester tarp fabric sold by the yard in rolls. I use mytarp.com because I have had success from them in the past and they have competitive prices. I also use very large plastic zippers made for tents that I found off of Amazon. 10oz means that every 36" by 36" of fabric weighs 10 ounces. You can do the math from there on how much this will weigh. You will not need a rain fly with this tent You can make one for shade from some other fabric if needing it in summer. It naturally dissipates heat out the top using a crawl hole exit style design found on 1940's to 1970's A-frame mountaineering tents for a snow cave exit when a tent gets completely buried in snow after days of blizzarding. It's like a crawl sleeve that bunches together tight when closed.
The video below will show you how to work with the fabric and the glue. Making your own templates will be described lower down. It's just eight triangles all glued together, two big zippers glued in, a bottom glued on at the base, and a detached top cone that allows air out with a way to close it off to keep the heat in and the rain out. It's very close to the design of the one shown in the Bob Wells video above.
Here is how to glue (weld) this fabric together at all your seams:
There is no sowing required anywhere in this do-it-yourself method.
I use two products. One is HH-66 adhesive:
https://www.mytarp.com/products/hh-66-vinyl-cement
The other is 10oz to 14oz Vinyl Coated Polyester tarp fabric sold by the yard in rolls. I use mytarp.com because I have had success from them in the past and they have competitive prices. I also use very large plastic zippers made for tents that I found off of Amazon. 10oz means that every 36" by 36" of fabric weighs 10 ounces. You can do the math from there on how much this will weigh. You will not need a rain fly with this tent You can make one for shade from some other fabric if needing it in summer. It naturally dissipates heat out the top using a crawl hole exit style design found on 1940's to 1970's A-frame mountaineering tents for a snow cave exit when a tent gets completely buried in snow after days of blizzarding. It's like a crawl sleeve that bunches together tight when closed.
The video below will show you how to work with the fabric and the glue. Making your own templates will be described lower down. It's just eight triangles all glued together, two big zippers glued in, a bottom glued on at the base, and a detached top cone that allows air out with a way to close it off to keep the heat in and the rain out. It's very close to the design of the one shown in the Bob Wells video above.
Here is how to glue (weld) this fabric together at all your seams:
There is no sowing required anywhere in this do-it-yourself method.